The man, the myth... Tom Shippey |
Laughing Shall I Die:
Lives and Deaths of the Great Vikings (2018, Reaktion Books) is Shippey’s semi-bombastic
rebuttal to the revisionists and whitewashers. It’s not that Vikings weren’t
also great traders, or slowly shifted from raiders and slave-takers to
land-owners and eventually settlers, but Saga literature and even the
archeological record paints a picture of savagery and warrior ethos that can’t
be so easily explained away.
“Academics have laboured to create a comfort-zone in which
Vikings can be massaged into respectability,” Shippey writes. “But the Vikings
and the Viking mindset deserve respect and understanding in their own terms—while
no one benefits from staying inside their comfort zone, not even academics.
This book accordingly offers a guiding hand into a somewhat, but in the end
not-so-very, alien world. Disturbing though it may be.”
Shippey lays out these uncomfortable facts in entertaining
style in Laughing Shall I Die. This
book takes a close look at the old Norse poems and sagas, and uses them to create
a psychological portrait of the Viking mindset. But it also goes a step further:
It interprets the findings from archeology and recent excavations to lend these
literary interpretations tangible and physical reinforcement. For example,
Shippey describes the discovery of two recent Viking Age mass graves in
England, one on the grounds of St. John’s College, Oxford, the other on the Dorset
Ridgeway. Both were organized mass executions, the latter the single largest
context of multiple decapitations from the period. Fearsome stuff.
In Old Norse, the term vikingr means pirate, or marauder. “It wasn’t an ethnic label, it was a job description,” Shippey writes. “If people weren’t raiding or looting (and land-grabbing, and collecting protection money) then they had stopped being Vikings. They were just Scandinavians.” Many modern studies embrace the Scandinavian aspect and shy away from murder and plunder, “retreating to the scholarly comfort-zones of exploration, trade, urban development and distanced narrative history. All of which is admittedly part of the story. Just not the only part,” he adds. So too were shield-walls and slave-taking and trading, even human sacrifice.
(This might be a good
time to boast that I met Shippey at a sci-fi and fantasy convention in Boston
10 years ago. Recap
here).
I can’t say that this book is of the same extraordinarily
high quality of his Road to Middle-Earth
or Tolkien: Author of the Century.
Those books set a standard in Tolkien criticism that has yet to be surpassed,
at least in my estimation. Shippey knows Tolkien, and I learned more about the
art of philology and Tolkien’s use of that discipline to build Middle-Earth
from reading Shippey’s works than I would in a semester of study.
Shippey also knows Vikings, but this book was not full of
the stunning revelations I learned in The
Road to Middle-Earth. Still, it was an entertaining read, and full of some
startling details about this incredible culture of sea-borne raiders that
wreaked havoc across England, Scotland, Ireland, and into Eastern Europe and
parts further. Vikings didn’t always win and occasionally suffered terrible
defeats, including at the likes of Clontarf and the Battle of Stamford Bridge
in 1066, the latter of which saw the death of the great King Harald Hardrada and
essentially ended the Viking age. But what made them so unique was their
fearlessness, fueled by a culture which valued stoicism, inflexible honor codes,
and a belief in the myth of Valhalla, in which they would die on the
battlefield but be reborn into a violent and eternal afterlife in the Halls of
Odin, until Ragnarok and the ending of the world. Something akin to a “death
cult” in Shippey’s words.
Laughing Shall I Die
is also a very accessible, readable book and a great way to experience the
stories of the likes of Hrolf Kraki and Egil Skallagrimsson, Signy the Volsung
and Gudrun the Nibelung, Ivar the Boneless, Ragnar Lodbrog, Skarphedin Njalsson,
and others. In other words, mainlined “Northern Thing” for those that enjoy
such things.
2 comments:
The title brings to mind the Saga of the Jomsvikings. A bunch of them are executed and they indulge in gallows humor while awaiting their deaths. (John Maddox Roberts clued me into that one.)
Paul, Shippey gives that story/sequence great treatment in Laughing Shall I Die. One by one, the 10 captives are executed, each giving some type of brief stoic remark typical of the laconic Saga style. The last dude asks for someone to hold his hair back as he is beheaded to avoid it getting blood-soaked, and a captor complies. But the Viking jerks his head back so the sword cuts off the hands of the helper.
Impressed with his pluck, Eirik, son of the Jarl, sets the man free.
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