Thursday, July 31, 2014

Satire in the Strange Realms of the Underground World

Ludvig Holberg’s 1741 Latin novel, The Journey of the Niels Klim to the World Underground presents a far-ranging satire of European society through an imaginary voyage of a young college graduate as he travels throughout a series of fantastic worlds beneath the earth’s surface. Utilizing the freedom of an imaginary world, the novel circumvented the strict censorship of its day to become something of a best-seller in Germany and Scandinavia. The eponymous Niels Klim approaches each society with an unwavering sense of his own superiority, and that of his homeland, only to be continually humiliated and ridiculed. The satire of the work emerges from the conflict between the naïve bravado of Klim and the different societies and values he encounters. Effectively, the novel circumvents potential censorship and backlash by seemingly reinforcing European values and supremacy, only to indirectly dismantle this perspective with the reason or foolishness of the elaborate fantasy worlds the narrator encounters.

Read the rest at CVLT Nation: http://www.cvltnation.com/satire-in-the-strange-realms-of-the-underground-world/

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Viking Terror & The Blood Eagle

Writing around the year 1200, the Danish historian Saxo Grammaticus recounts a vicious execution, taking place several centuries before his own lifetime in the age of the Vikings: “they ordered [Ella’s] back to be carved with the figure of an eagle, exultant because at his overthrow they were imprinting the cruelest of birds on their most ferocious enemy. Not satisfied with inflicting wounds, they salted the torn flesh.” (1) While tantalizingly vague, this execution became known in the later centuries as the “Blood-Eagle,” and has sparked a great deal of controversy with regards to its existence or meaning. However grisly this vision purports to be, it nevertheless proves to be relatively sober-minded in comparison to the later Icelandic account “The Tale of Ragnar’s Sons”, from roughly a century later: “They now had an eagle cut onto the back of Ella, and then tore the ribs from the back with a sword, so that the lungs were the pulled out.” (2)

Read the rest at CVLT Nation: http://www.cvltnation.com/viking-terror-the-blood-eagle/