Friday, July 19, 2019
Female Ideals and Their Roles in Icelandic Society Essay -- Iceland Wo
Female Ideals and Their Roles in Icelandic Society    Female ideals in medieval Icelandic society revolved around a woman's behavior  and actions in her marriage, work, and family domains. The historical background of  Icelandic women, womenââ¬â¢s general function in society, and the roles of female characters  in the Icelandic sagas provide hints towards the common attitude towards women of the  time, that is, how women were expected to act, what they were expected to do, and  essentially, what the ideal woman was.  To examine what an ideal Icelandic woman would have been like, it is first  necessary to look at some background information on the life of women in the period.  While women were nowhere near the status of men in terms of the amount of power they  had, they did enjoy a lot more rights than other women in medieval Europe (Simpson  129). A woman could own her own property (Simpson 128). Being able to manage her  own property and refuse a second marriage, widows enjoyed the most independence  (Simpson 129). At the same time, there were many things a woman could not do. For  example, a woman could not vote at the Thing, be a judge, or conduct her own lawsuit.  The approval of a father, husband, or other male guardian was needed for a woman to  buy or sell anything above a low value (Simpson 128). While a woman did not have  power over other people, especially men, she did have power in her own domestic sphere  to make decisions in the household (Dommasnes 71). In her essay "Women, Kinship,  and the Basis of Power" Liv Helga Dommasnes states, "As managers of all kinds of farm  products, such as food, textiles, and hides, it was in the hands of the wife to see to it that  the often quite big household of many generations, serva...              ...sible to get a  very clear picture of women in Icelandic society through the sagas alone, the coupling of  historic background with the sagas provides a clearer image of the ideal woman - strong,  confident, married or widowed, loyal to her family, concerned with her family's honor,  and an extremely hard worker.  12  Works Cited    Dammasnes, Liv Helga. "Women, Kinship, and the Basis of Power." Social Approaches  to Viking Studies. Ed. Ross Samson. Glasgow: Cruithne Press, 1991.    Jochens, Jenny. Women in Old Norse Society. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1995.    Simpson, Jacqueline. The Viking World. New York: St. Martin's Press. 1980.  The Sagas of Icelanders. Ed. Thorsson, Ornolfur. New York: Penguin Group, 2000.    Sawyer, Birgit and Peter. Medieval Scandinavia: From Conversion to Reformation, circa  800-1500. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993.                      
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