The Prose Edda (Brodeur Translation)
Snorri Sturleson
Read by Expatriate
Also known as the Younger Edda or Snorri's Edda, the Prose Edda is a three-part work composed or at least compiled by thirteenth-century Icelandic scholar Snorri Sturluson. Along with the Elder or Poetic Edda written by an unknown poet a half-century earlier, the Prose Edda is a major source of much older Norse mythology as it had evolved through the generations. The two Eddas have had a profound effect on European literature in both style and content, not least on J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-Earth fantasies. The first part of the Prose Edda is the Gylfaginning (The Tricking of Gylfi), dealing with the creation of the world and the major elements of Norse mythology. The second part, Skáldskaparmál, presented as a dialogue between Ægir, the God of the Sea and Bragi, the God of Poetry, is a fascinating textbook on skaldic poetry, including the uses of alliteration and kennings. The third part, Háttatal, is a trilogy of heroic poetry demonstrating the techniques of Skáldskaparmál (it is not included in this translation because of the translator's conviction that its highly technical nature "forbids" its effective translation into English). Arthur Gilchrist Brodeur, translator of Beowulf as well as the Prose Edda, was an intriguing person in his own right, writing pulp fiction along with his masterful scholarly translations and advocating radical political notions during the dangerous McCarthy era. - Summary by Expatriate (6 hr 20 min)
Chapters
Introduction | 26:45 | Read by Expatriate |
Prologue | 12:34 | Read by Expatriate |
Gylfaginning 01-10 | 17:50 | Read by Expatriate |
Gylfaginning 11-20 | 20:00 | Read by Expatriate |
Gylfaginning 21-34 | 19:12 | Read by Expatriate |
Gylfaginning 35-44 | 22:27 | Read by Expatriate |
Gylfaginning 45-48 | 23:20 | Read by Expatriate |
Gylfaginning 49-54 | 26:51 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 01-02 | 22:36 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 03-17 | 24:29 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 18-22 | 16:26 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 23-35 | 21:35 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 36-41 | 24:00 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 42-46 | 24:32 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 47-52 | 28:45 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 53-60 | 20:56 | Read by Expatriate |
Skáldskaparmál 61-74 | 28:41 | Read by Expatriate |
Reviews
A LibriVox Listener
A wonderful & fascinating text which will help anyone interested to better understand the more poetry-infused sagas (Egil's Saga, for example). It was also well read.
A LibriVox Listener
one of the best books ever written imo
A LibriVox Listener
Narrator was fine. The book was interesting at first - being stories of the gods. However the last part becomes a virtual thesaurus and gets a little drab.