ALONG THE ORAL-WRITTEN CONTINUUM UTRECHT STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL LITERACY 20 UTRECHT STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL LITERACY General Editor Marco Mostert (University of Utrecht) Editorial Board Gerd Althoff (Westfälische-Wilhelms-Universität Münster) Michael Clanchy (University of London) Peter Gumbert (University of Leiden) Mayke de Jong (University of Utrecht) Rosamond McKitterick (University of Cambridge) Arpád Orbán (University of Utrecht) Armando Petrucci (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa) Richard H. Rouse (UCLA) ALONG THE ORAL-WRITTEN CONTINUUM TYPES OF TEXTS, RELATIONS AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS edited by Slavica Rankoviæ, with Leidulf Melve and Else Mundal H F British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Along the oral-written continuum : types of texts, relations, and their implications. – (Utrecht studies in medieval literacy ; v. 20) 1. Literacy – Europe – History – To 1500. 2. Written communication – Europe – History – To 1500. 3. Oral tradition – Europe – History – To 1500. 4. Rhetoric, Medieval – Europe. 5. Old Norse literature – History and criticism. I. Series. II. Rankovic, Slavica. III. Melve, Leidulf. IV. Mundal, Else. 302.2'244'094'0902-dc22 ISBN-13: 9782503534077 © 2010 – Brepols Publishers n.v., Turnhout, Belgium All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. D/2010/0095/58 ISBN 978-2-503-53407-7 Printed in the E.U. on acid-free paper Contents Introduction SLAVICA RANKOVIÆ 1 Part I: Conceptualising the Continuum Verbal Marketplaces and the Oral-Literate Continuum JOHN MILES FOLEY 17 The Oral-Literate Continuum as a Space SLAVICA RANKOVIÆ 39 Mapping Public Debates along the Oral-Literate Continuum (1000-1300) LEIDULF MELVE 73 Part II: Oral Texts and Textual Performances: Verbal Art along the Continuum The Once and Future King: History and Memory in Sigvatr’s Poetry on Óláfr Haraldsson JUDITH JESCH 103 Old Norse Memorial Discourse between Orality and Literacy JOSEPH HARRIS 119 Viking Age Rune Stones in Scandinavia: The Interplay between Oral Monumentality and Commemorative Literacy KRISTEL ZILMER 135 How Did the Arrival of Writing Influence Old Norse Oral Culture? ELSE MUNDAL 163 vi Contents Liquid Knowledge: Traditional Conceptualisations of Learning in Eddic Poetry JUDY QUINN 183 The Poetic Edda: Literature or Folklore? VÉSTEINN ÓLASON 227 The Poetic Curse and Its Relatives BERNT ØYVIND THORVALDSEN 253 A Text in Flux: St. Hallvard’s Legend and Its Redactions ÅSLAUG OMMUNDSEN 269 The Charm and Difficulty of a Fragment: Tracing Orality in Cena Cypriani and Summarium Biblie LUCIE DOLEŽALOVÁ 291 Staging the Text: On the Development of a Consciousness of Writing in the Norwegian and Icelandic Literature of the Middle Ages JÜRG GLAUSER 311 Part III: Of Kings and Peasants: The Orality-Literacy Continuum and the Advent of Administrative Writing “Audire, intelligere, memorie commendare”: Attitudes of the Rulers of Medieval Central Europe towards Written Texts ANNA ADAMSKA 337 A Carolingian Pun and Charlemagne’s Languages THEODORE M. ANDERSSON 357 Administrative Literacy in Norway SVERRE BAGGE 371 On Evaluating “the Growth of a Literate Mentality” in Late Medieval Norway JAN RAGNAR HAGLAND 397 The Role of the Swedish Lawman in the Spread of Lay Literacy INGER LARSSON 411 Using the Written Word in a Late Medieval Rural Society: The Case of Denmark BJØRN POULSEN 429 The Early History of Written Culture in the Northern Netherlands MARCO MOSTERT 449 Introduction SLAVICA RANKOVIÆ The papers collected in this book build on the contributions originally presented at a conference organised by the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Bergen in October 2007. Together, they represent a selection of practices currently being employed in the effort to develop a better understanding of the complex ways orality and literacy influence one another, whether by tracing distinct cultural trends that mark the introduction of writing, or by analysing traditional narratives and poetry with a heightened sensitivity to the aesthetic integrity of the intermediate forms such as oral texts and textual performances. This book thus reflects diverse perspectives, texts and genres (literary, historical, administrative, ecclesiastical, legal, polemical, etc.) and involves a range of European cultural contexts, with special emphasis on Scan- dinavia and Northern Europe, but also reaching out to various other corners of the continent: from France, the Netherlands and England in the West, over Germany, Bohemia and Poland in the Centre, to Serbia and Bosnia in the Southeast. The single overarching idea that binds all the contributions is that of the oral-written continuum. One of the recurring topics in recent studies of orality and literacy has been the need to transcend the dichotomous understanding of the ‘oral’ and the ‘written’, the need born out of recognition that, through its richness and variety, verbal art resists segregation into two mutually exclusive camps. In turn, one of the most effective means used to counter and dispel the metaphor of the ‘Great Divide’ has been Ruth Finnegan’s idea of the oral-writ- ten, or the oral-literate continuum. However, while often casually invoked in analyses of particular works, the concept has never been a focus of study in its 2 SLAVICA RANKOVIÆ own right. The present volume is an attempt to place the oral-written contin- uum at the heart of discussion, as an object of a head-on theoretical investiga- tion, and as a tool for navigating the rugged landscape of verbal forms, explor- ing the diversity and complexity of oral-literary interrelationships that they manifest. The book is organised in three parts. Part I opens with three articles, each representing an attempt at “Conceptualising the Continuum”. JOHN MILES FOLEY proposes a view of the oral-literate continuum as a complex interplay of what he terms the “three verbal marketplaces”, or agoras, representing the three principal media of human communication to date: oral, textual and elec- tronic. While the dominant currency of each agora is a particular medium, none of them should be understood as a pure or closed economy. Thus the oAgora ranges from the straightforward oral compositions and performances, over texts written with the intent of being orally performed, as well as texts that draw on both oral and literary traditions and compositional techniques, to texts composed in writing and intended for print and silent reading by an audi- ence familiar with the specialised register of a particular oral tradition. Simi- larly, the tAgora ranges from the fluid, malleable hand-written texts of the Middle Ages, over the ‘brick-and-mortar’, post-Gutenbergian creations, to static files of pixel-pages. The latter also constitutes an overlap with one end of the eAgora spectrum. The other end is inhabited by the non-linear, interac- tive, option-driven texts, the networked dynamics of which have affinities with the oAgora. Foley places a special emphasis on the “OT-IT homology” and provides examples of how the latter technology can be used most fruitfully to represent the former. SLAVICA RANKOVIÆ traces a brief history of, and reviews some common assumptions about the oral-written continuum as a concept, arriving at the question of whether it is still viable to conceive of the continuum as a one- dimensional stretch of progressive development, a timeline. Building on Ruth Finnegan’s work, Rankoviæ proposes a model of the continuum as a space of at least three dimensions reflecting, respectively, the dependency (or other- wise) of composition on the recording media, the poetic principles at play indicative (or otherwise) of the anxiety of interpretation and influence, and finally the evidence (or otherwise) of heteroglossia ‘in’ and ‘around’ the works examined. Although already implicit in the common usage of the term, the three dimensions of the continuum seem to inevitably collapse into an inter- locked, linear set of causally dependant attitudes, leading to a cultural equation Introduction 3 that for a particular type of society predicts a particular kind of literature, which in turn exhibits a narrow set of poetic and aesthetic characteristics. The orthogonality of the three dimensions in the proposed model liberates what should always have been a set of distinct cultural and aesthetic qualities from mutual causal dependency, ensuring that the placement of a verbal artwork (or a literary trend, or a tradition) on one scale does not predetermine its position on the other two. Such space then allows, in principle, for any kind of interac- tion and any degree of permeability between the oral and the written. The model is illustrated by plotting oral and orally derived traditional literatures as diverse as Serbian Christian and Bosnian Muslim epics, skaldic verse and the sagas of Icelanders, as well as the non-traditional verbal species, such as the modernist novel (Ulysses) and Wikipedia. LEIDULF MELVE explores the concept of the continuum as it pertains to the process of textualisation, and offers a model specifically tailored for consider- ation of the medieval public debate. The key insights that inform his theoretical scheme are the importance of the aural form of communication, the centrality of the performance, or performativity in the communicative process, and the need to take the practical use of text (i.e. reception) into account. The model includes five variables, two of which (“vernacular dimension” and “oral proce- dures”) relate to the oral end of the continuum, two (“textual hierarchy” and “discourse”) to the literate end, and one (“interpretative societies”) pertaining to both. Melve uses these variables to chart public debates that sprang up around three major historical events – the Investiture Contest (c. 1030-1122), the Becket controversy (1163-1170) and the Baronial Rebellion of 1258. Map- ping treatises and other polemical writings according to the proposed variables seems to reveal a trend from the closed, elitist debate conducted exclusively in Latin (Investiture Contest) towards a more open and inclusive kind with either an emerging (Becket controversy) or a very strong (Baronial Rebellion) vernac- ular dimension and oral procedures, and a discourse that is moving away from the critical and argumentative towards the demonstrative. The articles in Part II of the volume, “Oral Texts and Textual Perfor- mances: Verbal Art along the Continuum”, probe and exemplify possibilities of the oral-written continuum through close analysis of specific texts, be they orally composed pieces that anticipate (or already incorporate) aspects of liter- acy, orally derived texts, texts written as cues for oral delivery, aurally received written compositions, or texts composed in writing yet relying on the kind of manuscript transmission that favours oral-like variability, or fluidity, rather 4 SLAVICA RANKOVIÆ than textual stability. The material ranges from the Eddic and skaldic poetry to the sagas, legends of saints, biblical marginalia and runic inscriptions. Structured as an orality-literacy continuum itself, Part II opens with three articles that all deal with Old Norse memorial discourse. JUDITH JESCH’s con- tribution focuses on the poetic career and practices of Sigvatr Þórðarson, the eleventh-century Icelandic skald, advisor and close friend of King Óláfr Haraldsson of Norway. While composed and performed orally, Sigvatr’s poetry nevertheless seems to demonstrate an awareness of different kinds of writing and their uses. This is most apparent in the way the poet helps establish Óláfr’s saintly role as the eternal king of Norway, appropriating new Christian memo- rial practices and non-traditional perspectives on the past and future to the highly traditional oral idiom and its existing commemorative framework. In Sigvatr’s rendering courtly skaldic verse is both a medium of dignified public remembrance as well as the vehicle for expressing very personal feelings (e.g. on the passing of his lord and friend) and very personal views (e.g. those com- municated in the advisory verses directed at his godson and King Óláfr’s heir, Magnús). While Sigvatr’s poetry indexes a confident command of the tradi- tional skaldic register and poetics, at the same time it shows a strong tendency towards a versatile, innovative expression of the kind that gains ground more firmly in written literature. Thus his opus itself represents something of an oral-written continuum. JOSEPH HARRIS’s article engages with two forms that both involve public performance and preserving the memory of the departed – runic inscriptions and the erfikvæði (funeral poetry) subgroup of skaldic poetry. While the roots of the two forms’ similarities in content, poetics and function partially lie in their mutual influence – through the Verschriftlichung of oral verse and Vermündlichung of writing – Harris finds their common ritual background “a more comprehensive explanation”. As worthy of note as the similarities are the differences and contrasts between the two forms, especially those concerning the attitudes to their own mediality. Thus, while inscriptions on rune stones emphasise the durability of their medium, erfikvæði stress the perpetuity of the deceased’s reputation, not the permanence of the verbal structure itself, even if some skaldic verses (e.g. Egill Skallagrímsson’s Arinbjarnarkviða) do reflect on the materiality of language, and even if, in comparison with other oral po- etry, skaldic verse exhibits the kind of invariability that is more characteristic of writing. The article concludes by asserting that, in terms of their ability to affect audiences past and present, it is the shared commemorative aspect of
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