Gripla - 20.12.2016, Page 104

Gripla - 20.12.2016, Page 104
GRIPLA104 a text. the resulting map is an apparatus that allows a visual representation of the interpretive links a knowledgeable reader – or thoughtful writer – would have been mentally engaged in while navigating a text. the resulting map can then be analyzed for patterns after the act of reading is over. Saga studies have begun to take note of mapping as a tool for understanding how the sagas interact with environmental, gender, historical, and political changes, and includes important work by Christopher Callow44 and an ambitious mapping project described in an article by Emily Lethbridge and Steven Hartman.45 this paper builds on these efforts but with a greater emphasis on the intimate, phenomenological sense of lived landscape that the original, engaged reader/audience would have had in mind while listen- ing to the saga.46 for the original medieval audience, a two-dimensional representation of real space – a map – was neither needed nor utilized. Instead, local people familiar with the landscape of the saga would carry with them a mental map that was not an abstract aerial depiction but rather an eye-level immersive sensory memory.47 Perhaps they had traveled the same route as Þórður, perhaps they knew someone who lived at a farm named in the text. they would therefore be able to visualize the saga events in ways scholars and readers unfamiliar with the landscape can only approximate. for those sagas like Þórðar saga hreðu that have a limited geographic sensibility, the saga-teller was anticipating that the intended local audience would have that level of knowledge; in other words, it was part of its generic modus operandi. 44 Chris Callow, “Putting Women in their Place? Gender, Landscape, and the Construction of Landnámabók,” Viking and Medieval Scandinavia 7 (2011): 7–26. 45 Emily Lethbridge and Steven Hartman, “Inscribing Environmental Memory in the Ice- landic Sagas and the Icelandic Saga Map,” PMLA 131 v. 2 (2016): 381–391. 46 My work is directly inspired by Gillian overing and Marijane osborn, Landscape of Desire: Partial stories of the Medieval Scandinavian World (Minneapolis: university of Minnesota Press, 1994). 47 See Howard n. Casey, Getting Back into Place: Toward a Renewed Understanding of the Place World (Bloomington: Indiana university Press, 2nd edition, 2009) and Tim Ingold, Being Alive: Essays on Movement, Knowledge, and Description (London and new York: routledge, 2011).
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