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Narratives of Risk: Interdisciplinary Studies is the result of an international project involving authors from institutions of higher education in Denmark, Greece, Malta and Norway. Twenty-one contributions, partly in German and partly in English, discuss stories of risk circulating within different fields of research: linguistics, translation studies, comparative literature, rhetoric, education, theology, psychology, sociology and political science. The concept of risk is multi-faceted. As these articles illustrate, stories can be about risk, but they can also be risky in themselves. For example, a technical manual can help people avoid dangerous situations; however, a faulty translation ca...
Herman Oskar Theodor Björkqvist was born 20 June 1882 at Visby, Island of Gotland. His parents were Hans Petter Björkqvist (1844-1907) and Johanna Karolina Pettersson. He emigrated and settled in Sandstone, Minnesota. He married Wilhelmina Blomqvist 31 January 1905. They had two children, He died in 1908. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Gotland, Sweden, Minnesota, Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Biographical note: Catharina Bjørkquist is an associate professor in Political Science at Østfold University College in Halden, Norway. Stakeholder Regimes in Higher Education - Old Ideas in New Bottles? is a revised version of her doctoral thesis, Karlstad University, Sweden, 2009.
This books explores varying conceptions of the Nightmare hag, mara, in Scandinavian folk belief. What began as observations of some startling narratives preserved in folklore archives where sex, violence and curses are recurring themes gradually led to questions as to how rural people envisaged good and evil, illness and health, and cause and effect. At closer reading, narratives about the mara character involve existential themes, as well as comments on gender and social hierarchy. This monograph analyses how this female creature was conceived of in oral literature and everyday ritual practice in pre-industrial Scandinavia, and what role she played in a larger pattern of belief in witchcraft and magic.
Now available in paperback, 'Lady with a Mead Cup' is a broad-ranging, innovative, and strikingly original study of the early medieval barbarian cup-offering ritual and its social, institutional, and religious significance. Medievalists are familiar with the image of a queen offering a drink to a king or chieftain and to his retainers, the Wealhtheow scene in Beowulf being perhaps the most famous instance. Drawing on archaeology, anthropology, and philology, as well as medieval history, Professor Enright has produced the first work in English on the warband and on the significance of barbarian drinking rituals.