Family interactions in Old Norse myth and legend were often fraught,
competitive, even violent as well as loving, protective and supportive.
Focusing particularly on intergenerational relationships in the
legendary sagas, the Poetic Edda and Snorra Edda, this book reveals
not only why ambivalence was so characteristic of mythic-heroic kinship
relations but how they were able to endure, even thrive, in spite of
such pressures. Close attention is paid to the way gender inflects the
dynamic between parents and their children and to the patronymic naming
system which prevailed in Old Norse society, while outdated assumptions
about the existence of a special relationship between a man and his
sister's son inherited from earlier Germanic society are reassessed for
the first time in decades. What emerges from this wide-ranging study is
a new understanding of Old Norse kinship as a dynamic transpersonal
process rather than a presocial fact, in which the individual self was
expanded to encompass its kin. Taking the lead from recent
anthropological research into kinship and with exciting implications for
our understanding of Old Norse personhood, emotions, and the life
course, this book challenges its readers to rethink many of the basic
ontological assumptions which they bring to their interpretations of Old
Norse myth and legend.