Entre a História e o Discurso: Uma análise da crônica islandesa Íslendingabók
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22478/ufpb.2595-9107.2025v8n08.76081Abstract
Between the years 1122 and 1133, Ari Þorgilsson the Wise, a chronicler and a man connected to the Church, wrote the Íslendingabók (The Book of the Icelanders), a chronicle that concisely presents the history of Iceland from the arrival of the first settlers around the year 874, through the official conversion to Christianity, up to the appointment of the first Icelandic bishops in 1118. Due to its documentary characteristics—such as the pursuit of reliable sources, temporal proximity to the events described, and the naming of individuals and their family connections—the text has long been considered a unique source for the study of Icelandic history. Thus, this work aims to raise questions about the study of medieval Icelandic narratives and their methodological approaches, considering oral tradition and discourse analysis as fundamental tools to explore the text's subtleties. We start from the premise that no narrative is neutral; both what is said and what is omitted carry symbolic expressions and interests inherent to the context in which they were produced. Therefore, when investigating a people and the formation of their identity through narratives, it becomes pertinent to recognize such texts as symbolic practices of their time.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The author (s) of the original submitted undertake to comply with the following:
- All authors are publicly responsible for it.
- The authors claim that this original is their own and that they assume full responsibility to third parties, whether moral or patrimonial, by reason of its content, stating that the work does not infringe any intellectual property rights of third parties.
- The author (s) agree to the copyrights of the original to Scandia Journal, to which they grant permission for its reproduction, editing and online publication.
- The author (s) grant their copyright of their original to the Scandia Journal, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which allows the sharing of this work with the acknowledgment of their authorship.
- The author (s) have permission and are encouraged to cite and distribute their original.
