UID:
almafu_9960966123802883
Umfang:
1 online resource (ix, 244 pages) :
,
illustrations (black and white), digital, PDF file(s).
Ausgabe:
First edition.
ISBN:
1-80010-648-3
,
1-80010-649-1
Serie:
Nature and environment in the Middle Ages
Inhalt:
Domestic animals played a range of roles in the imaginative world of medieval Icelanders: from partners in settlement and household allies, to violent offenders, foster-kin and surrogate wives, they were vital and effective members of the multispecies communities established from the ninth century onwards. This book examines the domestic animals of early Iceland in their physical and textual contexts, through detailed analysis of the spaces and places of the Icelandic farm and farming landscape, and textual sources such as The Book of Settlements, the earliest Icelandic laws, and various episodes from the Sagas and Tales of Icelanders. Taking a multidisciplinary approach to animal-human relationships, it sees animals not solely as symbols, metaphors, or objects, but as subjects in affective relationships with their human co-settlers who become the focus of intense exploration, delight, anxiety and condemnation in later textual narratives. By inviting readers to question how these sources form, embrace, or reject animal-human relationships, it provides a resource for understanding these archaeological sites and textual narratives differently: as products of multispecies communities in which animals and humans lived, worked, and died together.
Anmerkung:
Previously issued in print: 2022.
,
The Animal Acts ... An Animal-Human Settlement -- Home, Sweet Home: Meeting Points on the Animal-Human Farm -- The Animal-Human Community: Legal Tradition in Iceland -- Fostering Relations: The Animal-Human Home in the Íslendingasögur -- The Negative Animal: Absence, Precarity, and Danger -- ... and the Man Responds -- Bibliography.
Weitere Ausg.:
Print version: Evans Tang, Harriet Jean Animal-Human Relationships in Medieval Iceland Woodbridge : Boydell & Brewer, Limited,c2022 ISBN 9781843846437
Sprache:
Englisch
DOI:
10.2307/j.ctv2cc5rmt