توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Flesh and Word: Reading Bodies in Old Norse-Icelandic and Early Irish Literature
نام کتاب : Flesh and Word: Reading Bodies in Old Norse-Icelandic and Early Irish Literature
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : گوشت و کلمه: بدنهای خواندنی در ادبیات اسکاندیناوی-ایسلندی قدیم و ایرلندی اولیه
سری : Trends in Medieval Philology; 31
نویسندگان : Sarah Künzler
ناشر : De Gruyter
سال نشر : 2016
تعداد صفحات : 460
ISBN (شابک) : 9783110455878 , 9783110455380
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 3 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Contents\nPreface\n1. Introduction\n 1.1 Bodies and Mediality: Mapping Horizons\n 1.2 Research Questions\n 1.3 Studying Bodies in Medieval Literature: Some Remarks on Concepts and Terminology\n 1.3.1 Studying Texts as Texts\n 1.3.2 Looking Beyond Literature: Adjusting Methodology\n 1.3.3 Minor Matters\n 1.4 Texts\n2. Speak for Yourself! Expressive Mediality and the Self\n 2.1 Bodies that Speak\n 2.2 Expressive Mediality and Social Identity\n 2.2.1 Early Irish Literature: Reading Cú Chulainn with(in) The Politics of Anatomy\n 2.2.2 A Remarkable Presence or an Unmarked Presence? Bodies and Social Status from Rígsþula to Saga\n 2.3 How (not) to Be a Proper Man: Reading Beardless Faces\n 2.3.1 Beating a Boy? The Beardless Cú Chulainn in TBC\n 2.3.2 Female or No-Male? A Study of the Beardless Njál in Brennu-Njáls saga\n3. I am the Other – Who are You? Expressive Mediality and the Other\n 3.1 Ideas of Otherness in Medieval Literature\n 3.2 Reading Encounters with the Other\n 3.2.1 Original riddarasögur: Male Heroes and Female Others\n 3.2.2 ‘What Manner of Man,’ asked Ailill, ‘is this Hound?’: Cú Chulainn’s ríastrad\n 3.3 Hamhleypa and Metamorphosis: Reading the Unfixed Body\n 3.3.1 Revisiting Cú Chulainn’s Shifting Body\n 3.3.2 Crossing Boundaries: Hamhleypa in a fornaldarsaga Norðurlanda\n 3.4 Expressing Categories, Categories of Expression\n4. Scratching the Surface: Reading Bodies in Transmissive Mediality\n 4.1 The Transmissive Nature of Inscribed Skin\n 4.2 Show Me Your Skin and I’ll Tell You Who You Are: Reading Scars and Wounds in Ásmundar saga kappabani and Scéla Mucce Meic Dathó\n 4.3 And the Flesh Was Made Word: Cethern, Tuán and the Body Bearing (His-)story\n 4.4 And the Flesh Was Made Shame: Mutilated Bodies in Sigurðar saga þogla\n 4.5 Inscribed Bodies before Tattoo-Theory\n5. The Need to Need: Natural Bodily Matters in Mediality Discourse\n 5.1 Writing with Faeces, Writing about Faeces\n 5.2 What’s the Matter with the Matter? Urinating, Defecating and Social Space\n 5.2.1 Nature and Bodily Matters: The Early Irish Tradition\n 5.2.2 Culture and Bodily Matters: The Old Norse-Icelandic Tradition\n 5.3 Bloody Women, Bleeding Men? A New Reading of Fúal Medba\n 5.4 ‘Human’ Waste\n6. Concluding Matters\n 6.1 Reading Bodies as Texts, Reading Bodies in Texts\n 6.2 Revisiting Ideas\n 6.3 Situating the Findings\n7. List of Abbreviations\n8. Bibliography\n 8.1 Primary Sources\n 8.2 Secondary Sources\n 8.3 Electronic Sources\nIndex