Six Questions XXI: Ceallaigh S. MacCath-Moran
For Six Questions XXI, Mimisbrunnr.info interviewed Canadian-American folklorist and writer Ceallaigh S. MacCath-Moran. Residing in Nova Scotia, Canada, MacCath-Moran discusses her upbringing, her areas of academic focus (including studies on the place of Norse myth in metal music and the topic of unverified person gnosis (UPG) in modern Paganism), and elements derived from Germanic myth in her own fiction.
Getting Started with Norse Mythology
Looking for the best books for getting started on Norse Mythology? Need a hand navigating primary, second, and tertiary sources? Sick of people trying to sell you stuff every step of the way? Consider our recommendations!
Six Questions XX: Paul Kingsnorth
English writer Paul Kingsnorth is perhaps best known to Six Questions readers for his novel The Wake (Gray Wolf Press, 2014). The Wake received critical praise and significant media attention (see, for example, coverage in The Guardian, The New York Times, and NPR), and features a variety of topics rarely represented in modern popular culture.
Six Questions XIX: Seiðlæti
The first (and to date only) album by Seiðlæti, Icelandic artists Unnur Arndísardóttir and Reynir Katrínarson, makes for a notable departure from modern popular culture’s tendency to ignore goddesses from the Germanic record: Þagnarþulur (2017) features 17 songs, each dedicated to a different goddess from the Old Norse corpus.
Eddic to English: Patricia Terry (1989 [1969])
Eddic to English now contains an entry on Patricia Terry’s 1989 [1969] translation of the Poetic Eddic, including reviews and analysis.
Six Questions XVIII: Jennifer Snook
Jennifer Snook is an American sociologist and heathen. Snook is perhaps best known to date for her 2015 book American Heathens: The Politics of Identity in a Pagan Religious Movement, an in-depth study of adherents of Germanic Heathenry in the United States.
Ár Var Alda now in Seattle
On a date to be announced sometime within the next month or two, ancient Germanic studies reading circle Ár Var Alda will be reborn in Seattle, Washington. The group will meet monthly at Skål Beer Hall in the historic Scandinavian-American enclave of Ballard.
Six Questions XVII: Mathias Nordvig
For our seventeenth Six Questions entry, we interview Danish academic Mathias Nordvig. Nordvig grew up in Denmark and Greenland, and today teaches at the Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Colorado. Nordvig conducts research on a wide variety of topics in ancient Scandinavian studies.
Six Questions XVI: Teresa Dröfn Njarðvík
Teresa Dröfn Njarðvík is an Icelandic academic, author, and heathen. Over the past year, two books on the subject of the runic alphabet authored by Teresa have entered publication: Icelandic Runes: A Brief History, published by Almenna Bókafélagið, and Runes: The Icelandic Book of Fuþark, published by the Icelandic Magic Company (which will soon see an Icelandic language edition).
Six Questions XV: Eirik Storesund
Norwegian academic, writer, and artist Eirik Storesund is perhaps best known for running the blog and podcast Brute Norse.
Eddic to English Updates
Eddic to English now features draft overviews of all public domain English translations of the Poetic Edda!
Six Questions XIV: Alex Sager
For Mimisbrunnr.info's 14th Six Questions interview, we interview American academic Alexander Sager. Sager is department head of the University of Georgia's (UGA) Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies, and an associate professor of German Among other courses relating to German language, culture, and literature, Sager teaches a variety of courses relating to the ancient Germanic peoples, including the school's recently introduced course on the topic of Norse mythology. Sager also played a notable role in Mimisbrunnr.info's formation: he was Ár Var Alda: the Ancient Germanic Studies Society at UGA's faculty sponsor (and that of its precursors), which eventually developed into the present site.
