The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris

The reasons why not only William Morris, but also George Webbe Dasent, Thomas Carlyle, Samuel Laing, Matthew Arnold, Charles Kingsley, Edmund Gosse, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and James Russell Lowell all read, translated and rewrote Old Norse literature are large-scale, encompassing the history of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: SPINOZZI, Paola
Other Authors: Katja Schulz, Spinozzi, Paola
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Universitätsverlag Winter 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11392/1584069
http://www.winter-verlag.de/de/detail/978-3-8253-5935-5/Schulz_Hg_Eddische_Goetter_Edda_Rez_2_/
id ftunivferrarair:oai:iris.unife.it:11392/1584069
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivferrarair:oai:iris.unife.it:11392/1584069 2023-06-11T04:13:05+02:00 The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris SPINOZZI, Paola Katja Schulz Spinozzi, Paola 2011 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11392/1584069 http://www.winter-verlag.de/de/detail/978-3-8253-5935-5/Schulz_Hg_Eddische_Goetter_Edda_Rez_2_/ eng eng Universitätsverlag Winter country:DEU place:Heidelberg info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/9783825359355 ispartofbook:Eddische Götter und Helden. Milieus und Medien ihrer Rezeption / Eddic Gods and Heroes. The Milieux and Media of Their Reception Eddische Götter und Helden. Milieus und Medien ihrer Rezeption / Eddic Gods and Heroes. The Milieux and Media of Their Reception firstpage:187 lastpage:198 numberofpages:12 alleditors:Katja Schulz http://hdl.handle.net/11392/1584069 http://www.winter-verlag.de/de/detail/978-3-8253-5935-5/Schulz_Hg_Eddische_Goetter_Edda_Rez_2_/ Gran Bretagna Islanda Ottocento letteratura vittoriana letteratura norrena William Morri utopia utopismo News from Nowhere Edda Ragnarök proto-socialismo info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2011 ftunivferrarair 2023-05-31T16:48:36Z The reasons why not only William Morris, but also George Webbe Dasent, Thomas Carlyle, Samuel Laing, Matthew Arnold, Charles Kingsley, Edmund Gosse, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and James Russell Lowell all read, translated and rewrote Old Norse literature are large-scale, encompassing the history of European culture, politics, ethics, literature and comparative philology. They studied and visited Iceland in order to retrace the cultural origins of Northern Europe, to consolidate their ideological views about social and political institutions, to present the heroic code of behaviour as an ideal ethical model for the Victorians, to revive Old Norse narratives and to find a language which could express their pathos. Old Norse history and literature were perceived and valued as models for the cultural identity of Northern Europe during the nation-building process in the nineteenth century. Owing to their geographical isolation, Nordic countries had been able to preserve their Germanic matrix. The quest for the origins of Germanic culture in Northern Europe was thus accomplished by assigning a prominent status to Iceland. The originality and distinctiveness of the peoples which settled there is emphasised by Morris and Eiríkr Magnússon in the Preface to the first volume of The Saga Library published in 1891. For Morris ancient Iceland had been able to develop its forms of government and culture owing to the absence of Roman and then Norman feudalism and to develop a form of proto-socialism founded on the concept of kinship. Morris’s knowledge of the history of Europe was based on the study of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776) by Edward Gibbon in the 1852 edition annotated by H. H. Milman and of A History of the Fall of the Roman Empire (1834) by J. C. L. Sismondi. The Victorian reception of the ethos personified by the saga-heroes entailed philosophical and anthropological interrogations. The acquaintance with Old Norse gods and goddesses, forceful women and warriors, would invite readers to reflect on, ... Conference Object Iceland Islanda Università degli Studi di Ferrara: CINECA IRIS Gibbon ENVELOPE(-45.200,-45.200,-60.667,-60.667)
institution Open Polar
collection Università degli Studi di Ferrara: CINECA IRIS
op_collection_id ftunivferrarair
language English
topic Gran Bretagna
Islanda
Ottocento
letteratura vittoriana
letteratura norrena
William Morri
utopia
utopismo
News from Nowhere
Edda
Ragnarök
proto-socialismo
spellingShingle Gran Bretagna
Islanda
Ottocento
letteratura vittoriana
letteratura norrena
William Morri
utopia
utopismo
News from Nowhere
Edda
Ragnarök
proto-socialismo
SPINOZZI, Paola
The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris
topic_facet Gran Bretagna
Islanda
Ottocento
letteratura vittoriana
letteratura norrena
William Morri
utopia
utopismo
News from Nowhere
Edda
Ragnarök
proto-socialismo
description The reasons why not only William Morris, but also George Webbe Dasent, Thomas Carlyle, Samuel Laing, Matthew Arnold, Charles Kingsley, Edmund Gosse, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and James Russell Lowell all read, translated and rewrote Old Norse literature are large-scale, encompassing the history of European culture, politics, ethics, literature and comparative philology. They studied and visited Iceland in order to retrace the cultural origins of Northern Europe, to consolidate their ideological views about social and political institutions, to present the heroic code of behaviour as an ideal ethical model for the Victorians, to revive Old Norse narratives and to find a language which could express their pathos. Old Norse history and literature were perceived and valued as models for the cultural identity of Northern Europe during the nation-building process in the nineteenth century. Owing to their geographical isolation, Nordic countries had been able to preserve their Germanic matrix. The quest for the origins of Germanic culture in Northern Europe was thus accomplished by assigning a prominent status to Iceland. The originality and distinctiveness of the peoples which settled there is emphasised by Morris and Eiríkr Magnússon in the Preface to the first volume of The Saga Library published in 1891. For Morris ancient Iceland had been able to develop its forms of government and culture owing to the absence of Roman and then Norman feudalism and to develop a form of proto-socialism founded on the concept of kinship. Morris’s knowledge of the history of Europe was based on the study of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776) by Edward Gibbon in the 1852 edition annotated by H. H. Milman and of A History of the Fall of the Roman Empire (1834) by J. C. L. Sismondi. The Victorian reception of the ethos personified by the saga-heroes entailed philosophical and anthropological interrogations. The acquaintance with Old Norse gods and goddesses, forceful women and warriors, would invite readers to reflect on, ...
author2 Katja Schulz
Spinozzi, Paola
format Conference Object
author SPINOZZI, Paola
author_facet SPINOZZI, Paola
author_sort SPINOZZI, Paola
title The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris
title_short The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris
title_full The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris
title_fullStr The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris
title_full_unstemmed The Topos of Ragnarök in the Utopian Thought of William Morris
title_sort topos of ragnarök in the utopian thought of william morris
publisher Universitätsverlag Winter
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/11392/1584069
http://www.winter-verlag.de/de/detail/978-3-8253-5935-5/Schulz_Hg_Eddische_Goetter_Edda_Rez_2_/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-45.200,-45.200,-60.667,-60.667)
geographic Gibbon
geographic_facet Gibbon
genre Iceland
Islanda
genre_facet Iceland
Islanda
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/9783825359355
ispartofbook:Eddische Götter und Helden. Milieus und Medien ihrer Rezeption / Eddic Gods and Heroes. The Milieux and Media of Their Reception
Eddische Götter und Helden. Milieus und Medien ihrer Rezeption / Eddic Gods and Heroes. The Milieux and Media of Their Reception
firstpage:187
lastpage:198
numberofpages:12
alleditors:Katja Schulz
http://hdl.handle.net/11392/1584069
http://www.winter-verlag.de/de/detail/978-3-8253-5935-5/Schulz_Hg_Eddische_Goetter_Edda_Rez_2_/
_version_ 1768389690119946240