Publication Date:
2025
Short description:
(2025). Literary Routes to the New World: The Vínland Sagas . Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/303848
abstract:
This article investigates Eiríks saga rauða and Grœnlendinga saga, together known as the Vínland sagas, as literary artefacts shaped by the ideological and cultural context of thirteenth- century Iceland. While archaeological discoveries, such as the settlement at L’Anse aux Meadows, lend support to the historical plausibility of Norse exploration in North America around the year 1000, the sagas’ transmission, narrative structure, and ideological orientation suggest a more complex negotiation between memory and fiction. The study explores how Christian morality, social memory, and narrative tropes are embedded in the depiction of
landscapes, characters, and events. The main conclusion is that the sagas reflect a deliberate authorial effort to inscribe the colonial memory of Vínland within the evolving Icelandic identity in the thirteenth century.
landscapes, characters, and events. The main conclusion is that the sagas reflect a deliberate authorial effort to inscribe the colonial memory of Vínland within the evolving Icelandic identity in the thirteenth century.
Iris type:
1.2.01 Contributi in volume (Capitoli o Saggi) - Book Chapters/Essays
List of contributors:
Micci, Michael
Book title:
Quante Americhe? Europei nel Nuovo Mondo prima di Colombo fra storia e invenzione