Saga


Saga - 2011, Page 92

Saga - 2011, Page 92
united, free, and federated Scandinavia“.112 Í formála bókar Jóns er að finna lýsingu James Bryce sem nú má heita að sé orðin nokkuð stöðluð: Now Iceland is a country of quite exceptional and peculiar interest, not only in its physical but also in its historical aspects. The Icelanders are the smallest in number of the civilized nations of the world. … the is - land … is a Nation, with a language, a national character, a body of traditions that are all its own. Of all the civilized countries it is the most wild and barren … Yet the people of this remote isle, placed in an inhospitable Arctic wilderness, … has been from the beginning of its national life more than thousand years ago, an intellectually cultivated people which has produced a literature both in prose and in poetry that stands among the primitive literatures next after that of ancient Greece if one regards both its quantity and quality. Nowhere else, except in Greece, was so much produced that attained, in times of primitive simplicity, so high a level of excellence both in imaginative power and in brilliance of expression.113 Þótt margir Íslendingar efuðust um pan-skandinavískar skoðanir Jóns Stefánssonar tóku þeir þó fagnandi hugmyndinni um að bók- menntaarfleifð Íslendinga frá miðöldum mætti réttilega bera saman við forngrískar bókmenntir og gullöld Grikkja. Eftir fengið fullveldi árið 1918 og sér í lagi eftir lýðveldisstofnunina árið 1944 var spurn- ingin um þjóðlegan uppruna hinna norrænu miðaldabókmennta sett á oddinn í opinskáum deilum við aðrar þjóðir Norðurlanda. Þetta átti sér stað í deilunum um handritin milli íslenskra og danskra valdhafa um þjóðlegt upphaf Íslendingasagnanna.114 Hvaða þjóð gat eignað sér hinar dýrlegu íslensku eða norrænu miðaldir þegar fornbókmenntir Norðurlandanna voru samdar? clarence e. glad92 Victorians. Inventing the Old North in 19th-century Britain (Cambridge: D.S. Brewer 2000), bls. 34. 112 Jon Stefansson, Denmark and Sweden with Iceland and Finland, bls. xxx. 113 Sama heimild, bls. x–xi. 114 Guðmundur Hálfdanarson, „Interpreting the Nordic past. Icelandic Medieval Manuscripts and the Construction of a Modern Nation“, The Uses of the Middle Ages in Modern European States. Ritstj. Guy Marchal og Robert Evans (London: Palgrave Macmillan 2010), bls. 52–71. Saga haust 2011 NOTA_Saga haust 2004 - NOTA 11/24/11 9:51 AM Page 92
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