Gripla - 20.12.2017, Page 114

Gripla - 20.12.2017, Page 114
GRIPLA114 needed to turn a person into a monster than a sentence of full outlawry alone, it does seem to provide a trigger that then leads a character to be- come a monster in the eyes of society. After all, if Grettir or Hörðr had never been outlawed, they would not have had to turn to raiding and thus would not have become as socially disruptive as they turn out to be in their position as outsiders. Such triggers can be found in other types of social monsters as well: death is what turns a troublemaker into a monstrous un- dead creature; a certain innate pattern of behaviour, something in one’s eðli [nature],51 is what it takes for a man to go berserk; and it requires a specific kind of knowledge to allow a man or woman the use of harmful magic. All of these triggers involve a boundary-crossing, a transgression of the norms and laws of nature and society that leads to the character becoming hybrid.52 outlaws, too, exhibit transgressive traits: they overstep a societal boundary when they commit the crime that causes them to be sentenced to outlawry. these crimes are perceived as so grave and disruptive that they warrant a person’s exclusion from society.53 The status as an outsider, as someone who constantly walks on the edge of society but is isolated from it, then facilitates the second boundary-crossing that leads these characters partially out of the world of ordinary human experience. this can be seen in Grettir’s association with trolls (of the mountain-dwelling variety), as well as in Gísli’s haunting dreams that gain more and more control over his waking life as his outlawry progresses. Hörðr – who founds his own paral- lel society – presents a slightly different case since he does not experience the same amount of isolation as Grettir and Gísli. It is possible, however, to argue that the magic used to eventually bring him down, and the herfjö- 51 this ascription of berserkism to something that lies in a person’s eðli is found in berserkr descriptions both in Eyrbyggja saga (eds. Einar Ól. Sveinsson and Matthías Þórðarson), 67, and Vatnsdæla saga (ed. Einar Ól. Sveinsson), 97. 52 according to Yasmine Musharbash, “Introduction: Monsters, anthropology, and Monster Studies,” Monster Anthropology in Australasia and Beyond, eds. Yasmine Musharbash and Geir Henning Presterudstuen (new York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), 9, in a culture that distinguishes between humans and animals, monsters can be either a mix of those two cat- egories, or can transcend either, or can be less than either. Berserkir, in their animalistic be- haviour, are an ontologically mixed category, while revenants can be argued to be sub human while also being hybrid in their undeath, and magic-users potentially transcend human limitations because of the superhuman power they have due to their magical knowledge. 53 that the legally prescribed exclusion from society does not reflect the practice as described in the literary sources has been argued by frederic amory, “the Medieval Icelandic out- law,” and further discussed by Eleanor Barraclough, “Inside outlawry,” esp. 366–68.
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