ICELANDIC LITERATURE

the literature of Iceland. For the earliest literature of Iceland, see Old Norse literature.

Early Writings

With Iceland's loss of political independence (1261–64) came a decline in literature, although the linguistic tradition continued and the old writings were still venerated. In the 13th and 14th cent. the sagas of antiquity flourished; many were based on Eddic poems (see Edda). Chivalric romances appeared c.1300, emphasizing classical and ecclesiastical themes and showing French influence. From the 14th to the middle of the 16th cent. many foreign works were translated; Old Norse works were copied and compiled, and new religious poems were written in the old meters. The 14th cent. also saw the development of the rímur, metrically ingenious narrative poetry based on the sagas; it was popular until the 19th cent. and was revived in the 20th.

The Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries

The Protestant Reformation, reaching Iceland in the 16th cent., turned literary emphasis to hymns and illuminations of the Protestant faith. Einar Sigurdsson (1538–1626) was the great spiritual poet of the age. The first printing press was brought to Iceland in 1528 by Bishop Jón Aresson. From the Reformation until the late 18th cent. it was under church control; secular works were circulated in manuscript. After 1550, German and Danish influences were strong.

The great secular poets of the 17th cent. were Hallgrímur Petursson (1614–74), author of the Passion Hymns, and the satirist Stefan Olafsson (1620–88). Neoclassicism dominated literary style in the late 18th cent. In the early 19th cent. Árni Magnusson compiled a library of ancient Icelandic masterpieces.

The Creation of a Modern Icelandic Style

Continental romanticism and a newly aroused nationalism fed the romantic revival begun in the 1830s by the poets Bjarni Thorarensen (1786–1841) and Jónas Hallgrímsson (1807–45). The first writer of the modern Icelandic short story, Hallgrímsson also influenced Jón Thóroddsen, who wrote the first published Icelandic novel. This movement, whose practitioners created what became the classic Icelandic style of the 19th and 20th cent., was continued by Grimur Thomsen (1820–96), writer of heroic narrative poems; Benedikt Grondal (1826–1907), romantic and humorous poet; Steingrímur Thorsteinsson (1831–1913), lyric poet, satirist, and translator; and Matthías Jochumsson (1835–1920), whose plays mark the beginning of modern Icelandic drama. The towering figure of the period was the historian and statesman Jón Sigurðsson.

The periodical Verdandi [the present], founded in 1882, advanced a new realism—strongly socialistic, individualistic, and anticlerical, and influenced by the Danish critic Georg Brandes. Notable realists include the short-story writer and social critic Gestur Palsson (1852–91); the Icelandic-Canadian poet Stephan G. Stephansson (1853–1927); and the anticlerical satirist and lyric poet Thorsteinn Erlingsson (1858–1914). Einar H. Kvaran (1859–1938), at first a realist, later turned to religious and spiritual themes in his short stories about the poor in Reykjavík. Jón Trausti (pseud. of Guðmundur Magnusson, 1873–1918) in his fiction depicted medieval as well as modern Iceland.

The Twentieth Century

The 20th cent. saw the rise of a more introspective writing, influenced by Nietzsche and the French symbolists. One group of writers, part of the Icelandic colony in Copenhagen, wrote in Danish to reach a wider public. They were led by Johann Sigurjonsson (1880–1919), a romantic dramatist. Others were the romantic novelist Gunnar Gunnarsson and the cosmopolitan dramatist Guðmundur Kamban. A neoromantic movement arose in the 1920s; it had as a leading spirit the poet, scholar, and critic Sigurdur Nordal, author of the prose poem Hel (1919). Among the neoromantics were the novelists Guðmundur Hagalin and Kristmann Guðmundsson and the lyric poets Davið Stefánsson and Stefan Sigurdsson.

With the urbanization of Iceland's population came the rise of a working class and new patterns of life and thought. Kamban and Trausti early became socialists; Hagalin turned from conservative journalism to become thoroughly identified with the new socialist middle class. The most noted writer of this period was the Nobel laureate Halldor K. Laxness. The establishment of British and American bases in Iceland during World War II introduced foreign literary influence, and Icelandic independence (1944) increased nationalist and patriotic emphasis. In the 1950s the introspective "atom poets," including Stefan H. Grimsson and Hannes Sigfursson, won acclaim. Major writers of the late 20th cent. include Agnar Thórðarson, Elias Mar, Oddur Björnsson, Hannes Pétursson, and Jökull Jakobsson.

Bibliography

See S. Einarsson, History of Icelandic Prose Writers, 1800–1940 (1948) and A History of Icelandic Literature (1957); R. Beck, History of Icelandic Poets, 1800–1940 (1950); G. Turville-Petre, Origins of Icelandic Literature (1953); G. Jones, ed., Erik the Red, and Other Icelandic Sagas (1961).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Icelandic Literature  - 2312 results

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A History of Icelandic Literature Histories of Scandinavian Literature...Editor VOLUME 5 A History of Icelandic Literature Edited by Daisy Neijmann...Fund for the Promotion of Icelandic Literature. 2006 by the Board of...
...INTRODUCTORY--IRISH AND ICELANDIC SAGA IRELAND...traditional literature in prose form...life. Again, Icelandic saga-literature deals essentially...CONTACT WITH ICELANDIC SAGA IT is...individual a body of literature they are has...
...remarked upon by Icelandic authors like...Iceland in the literature. The Norse settlements...constitution of Icelandic society was made...language and literature. While the language...from the early Icelandic literature as well as in...
...or medieval literature who know the Icelandic material and...any secondary literature: this study...thirteenth-century Icelandic corpus that...these have-not literatures (disclosure...urge to see Icelandic literary texts...
...subsequent course of Icelandic literature has yet to be defined...a full homiletic literature in Icelandic; and the treasuries...part of the heroic literature of Germania. They...This is because the Icelandic conception of character...
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...Neijmann, Ed. A History of Icelandic Literature. by John Lindow...Neijmann, ed. A History of Icelandic Literature. Histories of Scandinavian...Stefan Einarssons History of Icelandic Literature (1957). One indication of...
A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature. by Carolyne Larrington...A Companion to Old Norse-Icelandic Literature. Ed. by RORY MCTURK. (Blackwell...comprehensive guide to Old Norse-Icelandic literature which functions as a basic...
Icelandic-Canadian Literature and Anglophone Minority Writing...author of various articles on Icelandic literature and minority literatures in...Hreinsson, Viethar. "Western Icelandic Literature 1870-1900". Scandinavian Canadian...
...Sports and Games in Icelandic Saga Literature. by John...and games in the Icelandic sagas (1) serve...verisimilitude of saga literature. Dramatic episodes...Medieval Iceland." Old/Icelandic Literature and Society. Ed...
...in her chapter of Old Norse-Icelandic Literature: A Critical Guide (1985) notes...compelling given that most good literature exhibits these patterns, which...difference between sagas and other literature--sagas have no personal development...
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...Old English, Old Icelandic and Anglo-Norman Literatures. Beowulf and...Old English, Old Icelandic and Anglo-Norman Literatures. Richard North and...Old English, Old Icelandic or Anglo-Norman literatures really are. After...
...Despite the high degree of English fluency and proliferation of colloquialisms, Icelandic has remained so consistent that schoolchildren can read the high literature of the Middle Ages without difficulty. These are the sagas, written about the...
Let No Slight Pass - Icelandic Identity as Revealed in the Sagas...to their identification with either Icelandic or a more-encompassing Norse identity...Europe, when nations were forming. The Icelandic family sagas and contemporary sagas...
...fiction. The eminent Icelandic writer Halld-r Laxness...1955 Nobel Prize in literature, is in many ways a...literacy. In every Icelandic household, a common...national commitment to literature: the literary form...century, as an elegy for Icelandic culture cast in the...
...characteristics may well be connected. "Icelandic literature was very fertile in the Middle...the Czech Republic, so is Icelandic literature special for Iceland. I dont...bright. Just think. Without Icelandic literature there would definitely be...
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...seem, turned out to be one of the seminal moments in English literature, equal to the untimely interruption by the Man of Porlock...of many languages, translating from the Portuguese, French, Icelandic, Hebrew, Latin and Spanish. Once he had begged the book from...
...at Edinburgh Academy and Jesus College, Oxford, where he studied English. He also spent two years studying Old Icelandic literature. His journalistic career began at the Scottish Daily Express and then The Scotsman. He later joined the BBC where...
...the store is well-stocked with Icelandic literature, as Icelanders are avid readers...to Folda, a factory shop with Icelandic sweaters, scarves, hats, mittens...soup. Also try Skyr, a national Icelandic drink that is much like yogurt...
...studied English. He also spent two years studying Old Icelandic literature. He began his career in journalism on the Scottish...children, but their elder son Siggy, named after his Icelandic grandfather Sigursteinn, was killed shortly before...
...I was doing research for Intrepid Women Travellers, a new literature course I was teaching in the Lifelong Learning Department...Cardiff University, that I came across Gudrid the Viking and the Icelandic sagas in which she appears for the first time. Id never really...
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ICELANDIC LITERATURE the literature of Iceland. For...1800 1940 (1948) and A History of Icelandic Literature (1957); R. Beck, History of Icelandic...G. Turville-Petre, Origins of Icelandic Literature (1953); G. Jones, ed., Erik the...
...Icelanders today read the Eddas and sagas of Old Norse literature more easily than the English and the Americans read...One reason for the relative stability and purity of Icelandic is that its speakers lived for centuries in comparative...
...in Old Norse Literature in Old Norse literature , especially Icelandic and Norwegian, narrative in prose or verse...sagas. See also S. Einarsson, A History of Icelandic Literature (1957); P. Hallberg, The Icelandic Saga...
...survives mainly in Icelandic writings, for...medieval vernacular literature remains from...medieval Norse literature, and the most...reflect the old Icelandic devotion to personal...A History of Icelandic Literature (1957); Old...
...Copenhagen from 1833, he developed an interest in Icelandic literature and history, on which he became the outstanding...directed the publication of monumental studies in Icelandic history and literature; he began the series Diplomatarium Islandicum...
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