Skírnir - 01.04.2003, Blaðsíða 41
SKÍRNIR
HINN BLINDI, HINN EINEYGÐI OG ...
35
bókmenntir. Heimskringla: Háskólaforiag Máls og menningar, Reykjavík:
125-139.
Schjodt, Jens Peter. 1983. „Livsdrik og vidensdrik. Et problem-komplex i nordisk
mytologi". Religionsvidenskabeligt tidsskrift 2: 85-102.
—. 1984. „Aser og vaner: Historie eller struktur". Fallos: 48-70.
—. 1990. „Horizontale und vertikale Achsen in der vorchristlichen skandinav-
ischen Kosmologie". T. Ahlbáck (ritstj.), Old Norse and Finnish Religions
and Cultic Place-Names. Based on Papers Read at the Symposium on
Encounters between Religions in Old Nordic Times and on Cultic Place-
Names held at Ábo, Finland, on the 19th-21st of August, 1987. Almqvist &
Wiksell International, Ábo: 35-57.
Sigurður Nordal. 1952 [1923]. Völuspá. 2. pr. Helgafell, Reykjavík.
Turville-Petre, E.O.G. 1964. Myth and Religion of the North. The Religion of
Ancient Scandinavia. Holt, Rhinehart and Winston, New York, Chicago og
San Fransisco.
Vries, J. de. 1930-1931. „Ginnungagap". Acta philologica scandinavica 5: 41-66.
—. 1961. Altnordisches etymologisches Wörterbuch. E. J. Brill, Leiden.
Bergljót S. Kristjánsdóttir þýddi
Summary
In the old Norse pantheon the supreme god Óðinn is one-eyed, while one of his
sons, Höður, is blind, and another, Þór, is described as having particularly sharp
eyes. This article attempts to analyse their one-eyedness, blindness and sharp eyes
to see whether they reveal something about the gods’ mythological roles. In Old
Norse literature eyes are used for instance as a symbol of royalty and strength.
Considering this, it is improbable that blindness is simply a physical handicap. In
the same way that emphasising eyes connotes superiority and strength, blindness
may connote inferiority and weakness, or níðingsskapur in the context of Old
Norse culture. Accordingly, Höður’s blindness may be a symbol of his níðings-
skapur in killing his brother Baldur, Óðinn’s one-eyedness may point to his con-
nection with ‘the civilised’ as well as ‘the uncivilised’, and finally Þór’s sharp gaze
is a token of his masculine strength.