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The
Thematic Unity of the Younger Gautreks saga
by DENNIES
CRONAN, University of Nevada-Reno
Gautreks saga, which usually appears in manuscripts as an introduction
or a sort of prelude to Hrólfs saga Gautrekssonar, has survived
in both an older and a younger, expanded redaction. The early version
consists of the Dalafífl and Gjafa-Refs pættir, two entirely
distinct stories which are connected only by the presence of King Gautrek.
the content of the saga becomes even more diverse in the longer version
with the addition of the story of Starkad's sacrifice of King Víkarr,
which is connected to the rest of the saga only through the device of
presenting Jarl Neri of the Gjafa-Refs páttr as the son of King
Víkarr. This latest addition appears to sit even less comfortably with
the original two stories than they do with each other. Both the insertion
of this story into the saga and the presentation of Neri as Víkarr's son
have been characterized as "willkürlich," 'arbitrary, capricious,' and
the reviser responsible for these additions has been described as a "Stümper,"
'bungler.' As might be expected, the individual strands of this saga have
received more attention than the saga itself, and with the partial exception
of the Starkad story that supplements the longer account in Saxo, the
saga appears to be regarded more as a useful mine of cultural and mythological
information than as a successful work of literature. Indeed, the only
attempt at a reading of the entire saga has been presented by an anthropologist,
Paul Durrenberger, whose interpretation, however, is limited to an examination
of reciprocity and its absence in each of the stories. More recently bruce
Lincoln, a historian of religion, has read the saga as a series of contrasts:
between the static and the mobile, the inland and the coast, accumulation
and exchange, the asocial and the social, the past and the non-past. But
despite his use of the younger version, he deals with the Starkad story
by simply ignoring it.
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