JÓN ÁRNASON OG GRÍSHILDUR GÓÐA : Um breytingar ritstjórans á frásögn konu af annarri konu

In 1864, an Icelandic folktale, Sagan af Grishildi goou (the Story of Grishildur the Good) was published in print for the first time, in Jon Arnason andd Guobrandur Vigfusson's folktale collection. The story, a version of the famous story of the Patient Griselda, has its roots in Boccaccio'...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Gripla
Main Author: Eggertsson, Reynir Thornor
Other Authors: Finskugriska och nordiska avdelningen, Nordisk litteratur, Nordiska språk
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Icelandic
Published: Stofnun Arna Magnussonar 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/352889
Description
Summary:In 1864, an Icelandic folktale, Sagan af Grishildi goou (the Story of Grishildur the Good) was published in print for the first time, in Jon Arnason andd Guobrandur Vigfusson's folktale collection. The story, a version of the famous story of the Patient Griselda, has its roots in Boccaccio's Decamerone from c. 1350, which Petrarch rewrote in Latin in 1373, so that it became widespread in European literary circles during the next centuries. The story reaches Iceland c. 1600 and became relatively popular, as at least 18 different versions of the story exist in Icelandic, both in prose and verse, preserved in 52 manuscripts, in addition to the few that have been published in print.When the folktale collection was republished in the 1950s, it included two Griselda folktales, the one from 1864, and also, a shorter, previously unpublished tale, which appeared in volume 5 in 1958. Upon a closer inspection, it turns out that both tales go back to the same handwritten tale in Jon Arnason's folktale manuscript, Lbs 533 4to, written by Ragnhildur Guomundsdottir (fol. 176r-78r). In fact, the 1864 edition is Jon Arnason's own rewriting of the tale (also preserved in Lbs 533 4to, fol. 220r-23r) while the one from 1958 presents Ragnhildur's original version. The article attempts to analyse and explain the changes Jon Arnason makes to Ragnhildur's story, in addition to present the folktalee's influence on later literary works.The main results of the study is that Jon mainly makes three types of changes. Firstly, he embellishes segments where Ragnhildur's narrative is short and without many details. Secondly, he changes back to the Boccaccio/Petrarch tradition some details which have been spoiled by orality, for instance, by returning the number of Griselda's children from the folktale traditional three, to Boccaccio/Petrarch's original two. Jon also removes connections to other narrative traditions, when he makes Ragnhildur's King Artus (Arthur) nameless. Thirdly, Jon seems to be influenced by the same misogyny as his ...