The Animal Heard

The sounds of animals were key soundmarks in the agro-pastoral landscapes of medieval Iceland. The Íslendingasögur contain a number of episodes centred around the sound-making of domestic animals and the effects of listening to them. Drawing on a range of sources including saga literature, the archa...

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Main Author: Harriet J. Evans Tang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Novus 2024-12-01
Series:Collegium Medievale
Online Access:https://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/2335
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author Harriet J. Evans Tang
author_facet Harriet J. Evans Tang
author_sort Harriet J. Evans Tang
collection DOAJ
description The sounds of animals were key soundmarks in the agro-pastoral landscapes of medieval Iceland. The Íslendingasögur contain a number of episodes centred around the sound-making of domestic animals and the effects of listening to them. Drawing on a range of sources including saga literature, the archaeology of Viking age Iceland, and modern studies of animal behaviour and human-animal relations, it is suggested that such narratives may have developed from stories about how to work with animals used for teaching within communities. The article also recognises that animal and animal-like sounds have the potential to destabilise both the perceived safety of the house and the concept of the human-animal divide.
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spelling doaj-art-63e702e10a8d4147aa0f56712462026e2025-08-20T02:52:44ZengNovusCollegium Medievale0801-92822387-67002024-12-0137The Animal HeardHarriet J. Evans Tang0University of YorkThe sounds of animals were key soundmarks in the agro-pastoral landscapes of medieval Iceland. The Íslendingasögur contain a number of episodes centred around the sound-making of domestic animals and the effects of listening to them. Drawing on a range of sources including saga literature, the archaeology of Viking age Iceland, and modern studies of animal behaviour and human-animal relations, it is suggested that such narratives may have developed from stories about how to work with animals used for teaching within communities. The article also recognises that animal and animal-like sounds have the potential to destabilise both the perceived safety of the house and the concept of the human-animal divide. https://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/2335
spellingShingle Harriet J. Evans Tang
The Animal Heard
Collegium Medievale
title The Animal Heard
title_full The Animal Heard
title_fullStr The Animal Heard
title_full_unstemmed The Animal Heard
title_short The Animal Heard
title_sort animal heard
url https://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/2335
work_keys_str_mv AT harrietjevanstang theanimalheard
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