Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.07.2009, Síða 46

Reykjavík Grapevine - 17.07.2009, Síða 46
34 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 10 — 2009 Poetry | Eiríkur Örn Norðdahl I became a poet for more or less the same reason everybody else did: I’m lazy and I wanted to sleep late. That was the job de- scription. You get to sleep late, drink late and most people won’t ever find out you’re stupid because what you do is beyond com- prehension anyway – your roots are in some ephemeral world on the other side of every- thing and poetry is not supposed to be un- derstood anymore than flowers (that’s why so many poems are about flowers – flowers rarely return the favour). I’d read books about poets. They were absent-minded and sentimental – check. They liked drinking and smoking – check. They read a lot of books, but in schools they were flunkies – check. They loved nothing more than lounging about – I remember hearing the Icelandic poet Sjón (I think it was him) say that 90% of a poet’s job con- sisted of sitting at cafés talking about shit. Double-check. It all seemed so easy. You don’t need any formal education and nobody can say (with- out a doubt) that what you do sucks. It’s all a matter of taste, and anyways, most poetry doesn’t even get noticed, let alone deemed good or bad. And poems are short. It takes years to write a novel. You can write a 60- page poetry book in a decent afternoon. At some point I, and my friend (and poet) Steinar Bragi, calculated that we could tech- nically write 10,000 poetry books in one year. Most of which would be better than most of what we were reading. And some years later, if you’re lucky, you get a government stipend and get sent to ex- otic countries to read onstage and lounge about with like-minded (lazy) individuals and being admired by people who wish they were as good at being lazy as you are. If you’re a loser, a drunkard, if you’re mean to people – it’s all a part of the game. Poets are supposed to be alcoholic, rude and emotional, self-centred (wo)manizers – people love it! It means they are really gifted; they’ve seen the depths of hell and are reporting back (to offer up one cliché on the matter). I’ve been a (serious) poet now, with in- termittent jobs, for about a decade. And let me tell you, it’s not all it’s cracked up to be. I used to be a slacker. (Wo)Man, I was king of the slackers. I could hardly be bothered to keep up with a conversation, let alone par- ticipate in one. But times have changed. I haven’t had three consecutive days without working in years. My day starts at eight in the morning and sometimes stretches past midnight. You know that time just before you fall asleep and all the weirdest thoughts in the world seem to crowd your mind? Well, that’s the most important time of the day for a poet. One has to keep vigil. Stay concentrated. And woe to him who falls asleep, for he will lose. (What he loses is not certain, but he loses nonetheless). And still you have to get up at eight because there’s stuff to be done, deadlines to be met. In two and a half months I’m going to start my paternity leave, and I’m scared shitless. In ten years I’ve managed to go from aspiring sentimental loser to neurotic workaholic. I’m not worried about having nothing to do – babies are work, that much I do know. But I don’t know what’ll happen if I leave poetry alone for three whole months. Will it wither and die without me? Will I start writing in secret? Locking myself in the bathroom to scribble a hurried poem? Will the authorities find out and punish me (I’m not supposed to be working while re- ceiving government money). Babies are inspiring. They will not be ignored. They induce sleeplessness, which induces creativity. I’m headed for disaster. In short, I’m not sure if I know anymore what to do with myself if I’m not working. Besides, whatever happened to becom- ing a loser? That was a fine and noble plan. Had I been lounging about for the last 10 years, perhaps I’d feel totally rested and relaxed and ready to face the challenge of getting up in the middle of the night to change diapers. Or perhaps I’d be totally out of shape, with cirrhosis of the liver, still mopping floors for a living, whining about never getting anything done. And despite all the neurotic worry- ing, I’m as psyched as the next guy about becoming a dad. It’ll be peaches and blue- berries, all day long until he becomes a teenager (at which point I’m sending him to military school). Poetics anonymous A (Slightly Outdated) History of Iceland. Speechless By The Mountain Books | Book Review Books | Book Review As the title clearly states, this book is a very brief account of the history of our small nation and country. And the first thing I noticed is that it is in fact very small, making it quite handy for travellers. The second thing I noticed is that the last part of chapter one about the settlement of Iceland seems to be missing. At least from the copy I have. And typically, it just had to be the most interesting part of the story of settlement that continues to be heatedly debated by both genetic special- ists and us common folk alike; the issue of whether Iceland was settled by brave, independent-minded people fed up with the oppressive rule of Harald Hairfair or, as some would have it, outlaws and criminals escaping Norwegian justice and grabbing some slaves along the way. So I guess that whether we Icelanders are descended from criminals or bravehearts will just have to remain a mystery, for now. Despite the aforementioned smallness, the book is packed with facts and infor- mation, and somehow still manages to be a surprisingly light read. The chapters are short with informative pictures and the in- dex at the back is also very helpful. There is a map of Iceland and a simple timeline in- side the cover that gives a basic overview of the history of the country. Christianity and the Church get a lot of coverage, understandably, as Christianity played a big part in history and politics of old. But personally I would have liked to have seen the Old Norse religion getting more than just a paragraph. A note on the first Icelanders way of living would also have been interesting, but perhaps that is moving into speculation rather than fact. And Gunnar seems to be a man of facts, which is fitting for a historian. For exam- ple, he states clearly that it was indeed Icelanders who were the first Europeans to discover America, knowledge that has long since been taken as a fact in Iceland but the outside world somehow manages to be doubtful about, despite the over- whelming evidence in our ancient sagas. The book was published in 2000 and has been re-printed three times, in 2003, 2007 and 2008, but without being updat- ed. Thus, on page 67, Ingibjörg Sólrún is said to be the mayor of Reykjavík though she only remained in office till 2003, and on page 63 the U.S. are said to still have a military base in Keflavík. So, although most facts remain facts, some of the in- formation in the book is outdated and perhaps even more clearly so as the atmo- sphere in Iceland has drastically changed since the economic meltdown of last Oc- tober. I particularly liked the part where it says: “History has taught Icelanders that political autonomy means prosperity, while submission means decline.” (p. 34) I think history has changed her mind. At least according to those who claim that submission to the Brits and Dutch in the Icesave debate is the only way out of this mess that we suddenly find ourselves in. - hiLdUR kNúTSdóTTiR A compact overview of the history of Iceland that still manages to be a surprisingly light read. This short philosophical essay evokes the question of the existence of the hu- man being and his relations to the outside world. Standing at the foot of the Askja, in awe of its raw and majestic appearance, Páll Skúlason – Icelandic philosopher and writer – searches for his place in the world as an entity. Wondering what connects things with each other and what actually makes the world a whole, he realises that he doesn’t know anything. He feels that he is thrown into the world, without any orientation, not knowing where to go. Askja for him is the symbol of the world itself; or rather, a symbol of the en- counter with the world and what is inher- ent in it. At the same time it is a natural symbol and re-condition for human ex- istence. Having said that, Páll Skúlason asks his main question: What is reality? And is there a concept or a system be- hind it? In line with epistemology, he doubts the possibility of conveying one’s true and own experience with the world to others, concluding that it is impossible to find an answer anyway. As a metaphy- sician he asks about the connection be- tween things in order to be able to find a universal explanation for our perception of existence, free of personal experience. He also considers ethical arguments, admitting that conventions and tradition keep us together. But apart from all these questions raised by philosophers in the last centuries and millennia, like Socrates, Heidegger, Descartes and Sartre, Skúla- son makes the case that humankind needs the reality as an independent en- tity of everlasting connections. Conse- quently, he ponders whether humankind lives in an alliance of trust with the natural whole, which means that true belief is a natural belief, also the Christian belief. There is reason why Skúlason – out of all the natural wonders in Iceland – chose Askja for his essay. Askja is one of the ac- tive volcanoes in Iceland. Its last eruption took place in 1961. Öskjuvatn, the lake belonging to the volcano, is more than 200 meters deep and therefore the deep- est lake in Iceland. The photographs gen- erously included in this little booklet give an idea of how vast and majestic Askja and its surrounding looks for all the read- ers who haven’t had the chance to see it. They help one understand why Skúlason was speechless when he went to Askja. Even if the reader might not completely agree with Skúlason’s theory, it becomes clear how small and unimportant he must have felt standing at the foot of Askja and how hard he tried to answer the ques- tions about his own place in the world. - iRiNA dOMURATh “Gedanken am Rande der Askja” Páll Skúlason University of Iceland Press, 2005 English translation available as “Meditation at the edge of Askja,” French translation also available A Brief history of iceland Gunnar Karlsson Mál og Menning, Reykjavík 2000. English translation by Anna Yates THE FIRST SETTLER OF THE NEW WORLD JÓNAS KRISTJÁNSSON A study of the ex- pedition made by Karls- efni to Vinland the Good in circa 1010 AD which planned to settle there, but was forced to leave due to the hostility of the natives after 3 years. Based on a new appraisal of older sources, in particu- lar the Saga of Eirik the Red, - probably most detailed and most trustworthy source concerning the voyages the North-America. U N I V E R S I T Y O F I C E L A N D P R E S S haskolautgafan.hi.is – hu@hi.is – tel. 525 4003 GAELIC INFLUENCE IN ICELAND GÍSLI SIGURÐSSON Why were the Icelanders the only Nordic nation in the Middle Ages to produce secular heroic prose narratives in the vernacular? Is it possible that the first Icelanders were under enough cultural influence from the Gaelic world to establish an entirely different tradition of story telling and poetic talent from that of their Scandinavian homelands? Laugavegur 23 Tel: 5526970

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