Review of Old Norse Poetry in Performance by Ben Chennells (Research Support Fund)

Report of the conference held at St Hugh’s College, Oxford, 21-22 June 2023

Building on previous events held in 2016 and 2019, ‘Old Norse Poetry in Performance: Inheritance and Innovation’ was the third conference in the series which brings established academics, early career researchers, students, and independent scholars of Old Norse poetry together with performers in the poetic traditions of the medieval north. 44 delegates attended, including 15 students/early career researchers, and five more participated online. In-person participants came from as far away as Australia, South Korea, and Colombia, along with representatives of eight different European countries.

The papers presented as part of the academic side of the conference covered a wide range of topics, including medieval modes of Eddic and skaldic performance, how these are represented in both medieval prosimetra and modern performance practices, and the emerging connections between performance and runic poetry. Simon Nygaard’s keynote lecture focused especially on this latter dimension, drawing on the field of contextual runology to produce intriguing insights into the lesser-discussed performative functions of such well-known artefacts as the Schlwesig rune stick and the Ribe skull fragment. The programme also boasted an exciting line-up of performance events. After the first day of the conference, delegates were treated to a two-part event at the Oxford Story Museum. This featured an original English translation of Vǫluspá performed by Clare Mulley and Kjell Braaten, and a performance of Þorbjǫrn hornklofi’s Glymdrápa by Pétur Húni Björnsson and Ben Chennells, which was accompanied by discussions investigating the relationships between performance, performer, and audience. Mulley and Braaten’s performance was especially well received and attracted a favourable review in the national press. As the conference came to a close, delegates also participated in an interactive workshop on Faroese balladry hosted by Tóta Árnadóttir, who combined enthusiasm and patience to great effect in getting a roomful of academics to enact a chain dance.

The conference organisers are immensely grateful to the Viking Society for once again supporting this event via the Research Support Fund, which was used to secure technical support at the Story Museum. The ongoing ONPiP project continues to prove engaging and productive for both academics and performance practitioners, and the organisers look forward to building on its success in the years to come.

Report from Luthien Cangemi (Research Support Fund)

International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, 2023

Thanks to the generous support of the Viking Society and the Wellcome Trust, I had the opportunity to organize and participate in two panels on Illness, Health, and Disease in the pre-modern Nordic areas at the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo (May 2023). I am delighted to convey that both sessions attracted a significant audience, and the attendees expressed great satisfaction with the comparative framework employed to explore the themes of illness and health within the contexts of Old English, Middle English, Anglo-Norman, and Old Norse.

This experience proved to be immensely valuable for my PhD research and significantly enhanced my academic network and organizational abilities. The connections I established through my involvement in the conference organization are profoundly influencing my academic career trajectory, and I am currently exploring the prospect of editing a volume based on the research presented at the Kalamazoo event.

Furthermore, attending the congress in person rather than online allowed me to gain a deeper understanding of the scholarly environment, practices, and research in the United States. I am sincerely grateful to the Viking Society for enabling my in-person attendance and for their assistance in making the most of this invaluable experience.

Call for Papers – Leeds 2024

We are proposing to organise sessions at the International Medieval Congress in Leeds in 2024, sponsored by the Viking Society. The dates of the conference are 1-4 July. We hope this will be a great way to promote interest in medieval Scandinavian topics and for Society members from all over the world to meet in dialogue. (Participation is not limited to Viking Society members, though, so feel free to pass this notice on to others who could be interested.)

The overall theme of the conference is ‘Crisis’. We welcome proposals responding to this theme in a medieval Scandinavian context (see the Call for Papers for inspiration on how it could be interpreted: https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2024/). We also welcome proposals, however, for papers ranging beyond the theme to address any aspect of the diverse interests covered by the Society, in whatever discipline – literary, historical, archaeological – and from a variety of perspectives. We hope to include a range of speakers from graduate students and early career researchers to more senior scholars.

If you would be interested in offering a paper, please get in touch! We can be reached by email at a.finlay@bbk.ac.uk and/or t.bourns@ucl.ac.uk. We will do our best to group individual papers together thematically, but please also let us know if you have an idea for a theme that others may be willing to join and we will try to make up the numbers (three twenty-minute papers being standard for a session). It will be helpful too if you could provide a short abstract (this will be needed eventually – c. 100 words – but a rough indication is all we need for the moment).

Session proposals are not due until 30th September 2023, so titles and topics do not need to be final at this stage, but we are setting an initial deadline for offers of 24th August. This is so that any offers that we can’t fit into our session plan can still be referred to the main programming committee, which has a deadline of 31st August for individual papers.

For those not familiar with the Leeds IMC conventions, please note that the Viking Society’s ‘sponsorship’ unfortunately does not imply financial support, and you, or your institution, will have to be able to fund attendance at what is, sadly, quite an expensive conference (though there are some bursaries available –see https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/proposals/bursary/ )

Hoping to see many of you in Leeds!

Alison Finlay

Tim Bourns