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“The myth in which the gods themselves were all destroyed” : reading A. S. Byatt’s Ragnarök: The End of the Gods and Klas Östergren’s The Hurricane Party

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Resumo:A. S. Byatt’s Ragnarök: The End of the Gods and Klas Östergren’s The Hurricane Party, both published by Canongate Myth Series, reimagine the Norse myth of Ragnarök in quite distinctive ways. Whereas Byatt chooses to merge a quite rare autobiographical account of her reading experience of the Norse myth as a child during World War II with its retelling in a new context, Östergren combines a futuristic dystopian tale and a modern retelling of the Lokasenna, one of the poems of the Poetic Edda which presents an exchange of insults between the Norse gods and Loki. Hence, this paper argues that Byatt’s Ragnarök and Östergren’s The Hurricane Party are both a cautionary tale and a thoughtful gaze through the looking glass at the tradition of storytelling against death in their modern reimagining of the Norse myth of Ragnarök.
Autores principais:Cheira, Alexandra
Assunto:Byatt, Antonia Susan, 1936-..... Ragnarök: The End of the Gods Canongate Myth Series Östergren, Klas Mitologia nórdica
Ano:2017
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
Descrição
Resumo:A. S. Byatt’s Ragnarök: The End of the Gods and Klas Östergren’s The Hurricane Party, both published by Canongate Myth Series, reimagine the Norse myth of Ragnarök in quite distinctive ways. Whereas Byatt chooses to merge a quite rare autobiographical account of her reading experience of the Norse myth as a child during World War II with its retelling in a new context, Östergren combines a futuristic dystopian tale and a modern retelling of the Lokasenna, one of the poems of the Poetic Edda which presents an exchange of insults between the Norse gods and Loki. Hence, this paper argues that Byatt’s Ragnarök and Östergren’s The Hurricane Party are both a cautionary tale and a thoughtful gaze through the looking glass at the tradition of storytelling against death in their modern reimagining of the Norse myth of Ragnarök.