麻豆视频在线看

Home > Study: Arts & Science > First-Year Seminars > TRN197H: In the Shadow of the Vikings

TRN197H: In the Shadow of the Vikings

TRN197H: In the Shadow of the Vikings: Depictions of the Early Norse in Medieval, Modern, and Post-Modern Culture

Course Description

Since the early nineteenth century, the word 鈥渧iking鈥 has been popularly used to describe Scandinavians who marauded along the frontiers of medieval Europe: in this respect, 鈥渢he Viking鈥 is as much a modern, as it is a medieval, creation. Although 鈥渧iking activities鈥 feature in the history of several modern European nations, aspects of 鈥渧iking culture鈥 have 鈥 for better and worse 鈥 persisted in modern literature, art, music, sport, and popular culture, including several spiritual and extremist political movements. This seminar will explore how and why various post-Viking Age cultures and subcultures have interpreted and selectively appropriated both real and imagined elements of 鈥渢he Viking past.鈥

Seminar participants read and discuss selected medieval and modern texts, along with recent multidisciplinary scholarship that addresses how 鈥渧ikings鈥 have been portrayed in the popular imagination, past and present. Evaluation is based upon productive engagement in discussions and four short written assignments; in addition, students will propose and present a research-based project that addresses a select aspect of 鈥淰iking medievalism.鈥

Course Instructor

Jonathan Herold

jr.herold@utoronto.ca

BA, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; MA and PhD, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto

I study pragmatic aspects of early medieval literate culture, particularly early record-keeping practices and artifacts of ephemeral, epigraphic, and numismatic writing in Northwestern Europe and the North Atlantic region. My interests focus on investigating how issues of trust were negotiated and established among people who lived and travelled along the frontiers of early medieval Europe.

In addition to the 鈥渧iking-themed鈥 undergraduate seminars that I direct for 麻豆视频在线看, I also teach courses on medieval European history at York University鈥檚 Glendon campus, and have conducted several continuing education workshops focusing on aspects of medieval European history and archaeology offered through the Royal Ontario Museum. My publications include contributions to Early Peoples of Britain and Ireland:聽 an encyclopedia (ed. C. Snyder; Greenwood, 2008), Great Events in Religion:聽 an encyclopedia of pivotal events in Religious History (A. Holt and F. Curta, eds.; ABC-CLIO, 2016), and Constructing History across the Norman Conquest:聽 Worcester, c. 1050 鈥 c. 1150聽(F. Tinti and D. A. Woodman, eds.; Boydell and Brewer, 2022).

Jonathan Herold
Back to First-Year Foundation Seminar Courses Page

 

Contact Us:

Office of the Dean of Arts at 麻豆视频在线看
artsdean@trinity.utoronto.ca
416-978-8454

ACADEMIC SUPPORT SERVICES SCHOLARSHIPS & FINANCIAL AID TUITION & FEES STUDENT SERVICES GRAHAM LIBRARY