兔子先生传媒文化作品

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As all things Nordic become chic, scholar steps in

As all things Nordic become chic, scholar steps in

Through scholarship and a popular podcast, 兔子先生传媒文化作品 professor Mathias Nordvig brings the Viking Age to the 21st century


We come from the land of the ice and snow
From the midnight sun where the hot springs flow.
The hammer of the gods
Will drive our ships to new lands.
To fight the horde
Sing and cry
Valhalla I am coming.

- 鈥淭he Immigrant Song鈥 by Led Zeppelin

When Robert Plant sang the opening lyrics to Led Zeppelin鈥檚 raucous, enduring, 1970 anthem 鈥淭he Immigrant Song,鈥 he was looking all the way back to 8th century CE, when three Viking longships are believed to have first landed in the British Isles.

A half century later, the Norse appear to have invaded once more, as Viking culture and all things Nordic continue to soar in popular culture. Old Norse gods such as Thor, Loki and Odin, command the screen at multiplexes, even as hordes of Europeans and North Americans have lustily embraced their Nordic roots through music, style and even religion.

Mathias Nordvig

Mathias Nordvig is an educator, artist, and more. Nordvig has a PhD in Norse mythology and teaches Nordic and Arctic cultures at the University of Colorado Boulder.

鈥淚t鈥檚 funny, to be honest, as someone who was interested in all this stuff back when I was in my pre-teens,鈥 says , a native of Denmark who grew up in Greenland and is now teaching assistant professor and head of Nordic Studies in the Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Colorado Boulder and co-founder of the popular podcast, . 

鈥淲e saw something similar with the Celts and Irish and Scottish culture, which became a theme in Hollywood.鈥

Nordvig, author of  and is gratified by the embrace of ancient Nordic culture by modern Americans and non-Nordic Europeans.

鈥淚 think one reason Nordic stuff is so popular is that it鈥檚 relatively accessible, but still the distant past. 鈥 It鈥檚 an anchor point, something people can relate to, from the old land,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here is just enough mystique around it that you can add your own flavor.鈥

When Nordvig was growing up, he stood out for his keen interest in ancient Nordic culture even among his fellow Danes.  

鈥淚 was like the weird Viking guy,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ow, all the sudden this has become mainstream.鈥

Nordvig knew exactly what he wanted to study when he went off to , and eventually earned a BA, MA and PhD in Scandinavian Studies. His PhD thesis, later published as , explores how Viking Age Scandinavian immigrants used Old Norse tales and myths to understand the active volcanoes of Iceland, a geologic anomaly unknown on the continent.

鈥淭hey used traditional stories to create a framework for understanding of what was happening鈥 in the restless, fiery belly of the Earth, he says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why the Icelandic landscape is still 鈥榩opulated鈥 today with so many trolls and elves. It鈥檚 entirely different from Norway, Denmark and Sweden; it鈥檚 a landscape that lives.鈥

As a scholar, Nordvig has also explored Nordic witchcraft and magic. The publication of the notorious Malleus Malificarum, or Hammer of the Witches, in 15th-century Germany prescribed death for 鈥渟orcery鈥 and 鈥渨itchcraft,鈥 setting off centuries of violence against persons accused of being witches and warlocks, including in Christianized Scandinavia. 

鈥淭he ideas 鈥 trickled down to become a schematic for people to get rid of their neighbors,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was also used as a kind of low-key ethnic cleansing.鈥

Magic was part of Nordic culture well before the arrival of Christianity, Nordvig says, as evidenced by archaeological discoveries of 鈥渨eird magical items鈥 such as a pouch containing a mouse skeleton, owl vomit and herbs. Women he calls 鈥渇emale ritual specialists鈥 were given high honor in pre-Christian Nordic culture, but denigrated as 鈥渨itches鈥 following the adoption of Christian ideas. 

In 2019, Nordvig co-founded the Nordic Mythology Podcast with Daniel Farrand, owner of , a company that sells Viking- and Nordic-themed goods and gear, after 鈥渟tumbling on each other on the internet.鈥 

鈥淲e decided to make a podcast to give people proper information about the Viking Age and Nordic mythology, and regularly send the message that this is something anybody can be a part of,鈥 Nordvig says.

Since then, they have recorded more than 150 episodes, everything from interviewing scholars to reports from the Midgardsblot heavy-metal and Viking-culture festival in Norway. More than 1 million downloads later, the podcast is a gathering place for Nordic enthusiasts.

鈥淚t鈥檚 become one of the centers of community around Viking-related stuff. We get a lot of artists, scholars and an audience, and we connect everybody with each other,鈥 he says.

Nordvig has practiced 脕satr煤, 鈥渁 modern spirituality based in the traditions, folklore, and mythology of Northern Europe and particularly Scandinavia,鈥 for most of his life. His book on the practice explores the history, traditions, gods and goddesses, ancient texts, rituals, and the use of runes as a guide to contemporary practice. 

One goal of all Nordvig鈥檚 work is to dispel persistent rumors of association between Nordic culture and right-wing, fascist and white-supremacist political movements, a lingering effect of the misappropriation of Nordic ideas and symbols in the modern era, Nordvig says. 

鈥淥ne important thing to keep in mind is that the whole Nazi and fascist movement in Europe was much more based in Christianity than anything else,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here were also these constructions, this 鈥楴ordic race鈥 nonsense. 鈥 They were just a bunch of people living in a corner of the world.鈥

And he eschews the stereotypical 鈥渕asculinist view鈥 that portrays the Vikings as the most 鈥渂rutal, violent figure in European history. In fact, they were no more masculine or brutal or violent at the time than anyone else.鈥

Nordvig also tries to dispel stereotypes from the other end of the political spectrum: the Vikings were uniquely connected to nature or that modern Scandinavian states are a socialist paradise.

But, he says, Nordic myth and culture are anything but disconnected from the rest of the world.

 

There are strong similarities across cultures, continents and human beings, and there is a way to cultivate a relationship to your personal heritage that can be a healthy and helpful way of being.鈥嬧

鈥淚f you look at the details of Nordic mythology, you鈥檒l realize it鈥檚 actually not that different from some mythical systems in West Africa and the vodun religion,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are strong similarities across cultures, continents and human beings, and there is a way to cultivate a relationship to your personal heritage that can be a healthy and helpful way of being.鈥

Nordvig recently decided to step down from co-hosting the Nordic Mythology Podcast to devote more time to his family and other projects, although he will still be a regular guest. And on Feb. 12, he launched .

鈥淚t鈥檚 about using Nordic myth in our lives today, how we can make use of these stories to rethink the way we live in modern society,鈥 he says.

Nordvig encourages 兔子先生传媒文化作品 students to check out the Nordic Program.

鈥淲e explore great examples of what it looks like when an isolated corner of the world is tied in globally, both in the Viking Age and the modern era,鈥 he says.