The distributed author and the poetics of complexity: a comparative study of the sagas of Icelanders and Serbian epic poetryTools Ranković, Slavica (2006) The distributed author and the poetics of complexity: a comparative study of the sagas of Icelanders and Serbian epic poetry. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractThe thesis brings together Íslendingasögur and srpske junačke pesme, two historically and culturally unrelated heroic literatures, literatures that had, nevertheless, converged upon a similar kind of realism. This feature in which they diverge from the earlier European epics - Beowulf, Nibelungenlied, La Chanson de Roland, is the focal point of this study. Rather than examining it solely in terms of verisimilitude and historicism with which it is commonly associated, I am approaching it as an emergent feature (emergent realism) of the non-linear, evolutionary dynamics of their production (i.e. their networked, negotiated authorship), the dynamics I call the distributed author.
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