Knight, Gwendolyne, “Broken order: shapeshifting as social metaphor in early medieval England and Ireland”, PhD thesis, Stockholm University, Faculty of Humanities, 2019.
- PhD thesis
Shapeshifting narratives appear in cultures all over the world, throughout human history. At each point, these narratives give expression to culturally contingent anxieties and preoccupations. This study examines shapeshifting narratives in early medieval England and Ireland in order to uncover what preoccupations informed the meaning of 'shapeshifting', and also what social functions these shapeshifting narratives could serve. It begins with a lexical analysis of the verbs and nouns most associated with shapeshifting narratives; then, it examines shapeshifting narratives on the one hand, and comparisons between humans and animals on the other; finally, the study turns to the sociocultural role of shapeshifting narratives. It demonstrates that, although shapeshifting manifests differently in English and Irish contexts, the importance of performance, in particular the proper performance of in-group behaviour, is a consistent theme between them. Often, shapeshifting narratives visually confirm or demonstrate changes that have already taken place. Although the transformation of a human into something else would appear to break the natural order, such a wondrous disruption ultimately reveals divine power, and reinforces the divine order.
page url: https://codecs.vanhamel.nl/Knight_(Gwendolyne)_2019_ka
redirect: https://codecs.vanhamel.nl/Special:Redirect/page/61712
numerical alternative: https://codecs.vanhamel.nl/index.php?curid=61712
page ID: 61712
page ID tracker: https://codecs.vanhamel.nl/index.php?title=Show:ID&id=61712