41. |
|
|
42. |
- Lagerlöf Nilsson, Ulrika, 1971
(författare)
-
Elisabeth Maria Beskow
- 2021
-
Ingår i: Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon. - Göteborg : Göteborgs universitet, Institutionen för historiska studier. - 9789163975943
-
Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
|
|
43. |
|
|
44. |
- Lagerwall, Sonia, 1967
(författare)
-
L'Alchimie du Verbe : langue, magie et sorcellerie selon Chloé Delaume
- 2017
-
Ingår i: Språkens magi. En festskrift för Ingmar Söhrman, professor i romanska språk / Andrea Castro, Anton Granvik, Ester Fernández Incógnito, Sara Lindbladh, Andreas Romeborn, Katharina Vajta (redaktörer). - Göteborg : Institutionen för språk och litteraturer. - 9789163953613 ; , s. 133-139
-
Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
|
|
45. |
- Lavender, Philip, 1981
(författare)
-
Illuga saga Gríðarfóstra - The Saga of Illugi, Gríður’s Foster-Son
- 2015
-
Bok (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
- An edition, translation and comprehensive glossary of Illuga saga, along with an introduction which covers the important questions of origins and reception of the saga. Illuga saga is a short legendary saga which first appears in manuscripts in the 16th century but may have much older roots (there is an analogue in Saxo Grammaticus' Gesta Danorum from c. 1200). The saga was popular, being extant in around 40 manuscripts. It was converted into rumor poetry on six separate occasions and Faroese, Norwegian and Danish ballads exist with comparable narrative material. The introduction gives a brief overview of this material and the humorous way in which the saga presents the encounter between hero and troll woman which forms the core of the narrative.
|
|
46. |
- Lavender, Philip, 1981
(författare)
-
“La Bofetada,” Serkland and the Encyclopedia Britannica: Borges Notes on Old Norse Literature
- 2021
-
Ingår i: Variaciones Borges. - 1396-0482. ; 52, s. 33-49
-
Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- This article presents new research on a notebook which contains notes by Jorge Luis Borges and his mother Leonor, written in 1950, at a significant moment in Borges' intellectual development. The notebook contains outlines for a series of lectures on Old English and Old Norse literature and bears a strong resemblance to Borges' first book-length publication on Germanic literature, “Antiguas literaturas germánicas”, which appeared just a year later in 1951. By comparing the notebook with the published work, a great deal is revealed about Borges' working method. For one thing, the notebook contains more detailed citations of Borges's sources, which allow us to see which texts he made use of in places where no reference is provided in “Antiguas literatures germánicas”. Moreover, we can compare certain scenes from saga literature, such as the famous slap from “Njáls saga” (“La bofetada”), which Borges had printed separately previously, then jotted down in the notebook and finally published in “Antiguas literatures gérmanicas”. The small differences in the three versions of the anecdote tell us about how Borges's relation to saga literature was changing over the years when he was going blind and developing his passion for Nordic literature.
|
|
47. |
- Lavender, Philip, 1981
(författare)
-
Las saga legendarias y los romances
- 2017
-
Ingår i: El mundo nórdico medieval: una introducción, Part 1 / [redaktörer: Santiago Barreiro, Renan Birro]. - Buenos Aires : Sociedad Argentina de Estudios Medievales. - 9789874261199 ; , s. 179-99
-
Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)abstract
- Icelandic sagas romances legendary
|
|
48. |
|
|
49. |
|
|
50. |
- Lavender, Philip, 1981
(författare)
-
The Semiotics of Hanging around in the Kitchen in Late Sagas and Rímur
- 2022
-
Ingår i: Food Culture in Medieval Scandinavia / Andrea Maraschi, Viktória Gyönki. (eds.). - Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press. - 9789462988217 ; , s. 167-189
-
Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)abstract
- This contribution interrogates the negative associations adhering to young men who spend their time close to kitchen fires, tracing the roots of this tradition in medieval Icelandic literature and charting its development in later Icelandic works produced between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries.
|
|