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måndag 6 juni 2016

Johanne Hildebrandt - Freja. Sagan om Valhalla

Freja is probably the most famous among the goddesses in Norse mythology. She belongs to the Vanir family and is the goddess of female fertility and sexuality, but she also has a connection to death. She is the leader of the valkyries, female spirits who walks around the battle field picking up fallen warriors. She then splits them with Odín taking half of them to her home Folkvang.

Johanne Hildebrandt's Freja is however not a goddess but a human being. She is a young priestess in Vanaheim during the Scandinavian Bronze Age. Her mother is Åse, queen of Vanaheim, but Freja has been raised by her aunt Gullveig, the high priestess of Vanaheim. One day they hear of a threat to their world, the Æsirs is pillaging Vanir farms and for the first time ever, Freja gets to leave Vanaheim to mediate in the conflict between them and the Æsirs together with Gullveig and Snotra. At the Æsirs farm Idunvallen, Freja meets Tor. He is the son of Oden, the leader of the Æsirs, and they fall in love. A war however breaks out and Tor is captured by the Vanirs.


Freja was first published in 2002 which was when I first read it. I was only 18 back then and as with so much other literature I read when I was a teenager or in my early twenties I have a somewhat different reaction to it now. In the case of Freja, my choice of profession probably plays a part in this.

Rock Carving of a sun horse from Tanum, Sweden
As a Scandinavian archaeologist, I love the fact that Hildebrandt chose to set her story in the Scandinavian prehistory. Besides the Viking Age, not many un-archaeologists in Sweden knows that much about the first couple of thousands of years after the latest Ice Age. The time before the Viking Age is generally seen as boring and not related to anything we do today. When talking about "ancient history" we generally go all the way down to the Mediterannean with Greeks and Romans taking their cultural heritage more in account than the one present in our own geographical sphere. This is sad, because there are many stories hidden within our own past. We just need to stop measuring societies by marbe temples.

To be completely honest, the Bronze Age is not really my favourite time period. This because I have heard to much about rock carvings during my educations. Do not get me wrong! Rock carvings are very beautiful and mysteriously fun, but if it is the only thing you hear about for three years and your main research interest is elsewhere in the past, you start to feel a little fed up after awhile. But I really enjoy Hildebrandt's Bronze Age. Both the physical and the spiritual. She has turned it into a matriarchy with women being the brain and with both the spiritual and the practical powers while men providing the muscles. Hildebrandt also portrays women as better suited for power than men. This is evident in for example the fact that the patriarchal Æsirs needs help in providing foods for their people. They have abandonned the mother goddess for the war god Tiwatz which might be seen symbolical as to their priorities.

I also enjoyed that Hildebrandt creates a mythological past to Freja's world with mentioning of what seems to be the Ice Age (even if the term is never used). There is a small mentioning of a battle between the Vanirs and what seems to be Stone Age people (maybe hunter-gatherers of the Paleolithic and/or Mesolithic eras) in the book called "the old people".

"Det gamla folket undvek människorna. Det sades att när Frejas folk kom seglande till detta land, vägledda av Gudinnan som räddade dem undan den stora katastrofen hade vanerna stridit mot det gamla folket, bronssvärd mot yxor av sten.
Vanerna hade segrat och sedan den dagen var det gamla folket försvunnet."
("The old people avoided the humans. They said that when Freja's people came sailing to this land, guided by the Goddess who saved them from the big catastrophe, the Vanirs had fought against the old people, bronze swords against stone axes.
The Vanirs were victorious and from that on, the old people had disappeared." )

At first I was not entirely sure I enjoyed this depiction of meetings between cultures. It seems very imperialistic. Cultures normally does not clash like that when they meet. However, as I continued on reading, I realised that there might still be a point in this depiction and that it might even be good and telling of the worldview of both Freja's society and our own. It is actually a pretty good description about the Western view of "cultural clashes" and how the West handled other "more primitive" people (not seldom groups of hunter-gatherers) during the European imperialism of later history. Seeing that this is a story about the past in Freja's world it provides a good example of how history is used to emphasize one group's past, making it more victorious and glorious than it might have been. And just like the non-Western groups the European met in the areas they colonized in the more recent past, "the old people" do not disappear completely. Freja thinks she sees them during her journey. This might be reading to much into nothing, but Hildebrandt does not portray the relations between the Vanirs and the Æsirs in this way. There are, of course, frictions between them at first, but none of them destroys the other completely. Instead, they start sorting out differences, creating new ways of living and interacting that is beneficial for all. This, I think, is a much better depiction of what cultural meetings really are in reality as opposed to in historical narratives.

Freja is the first in the series Sagan om Valhalla. There are much more to say about her and the stories, but it will become much clearer in later books. Therefore I will leave my analysis here at the moment and start rereading the book about Freja's daughter Idun.

The four Valhalla-books that have been published until this date (6/6 2016)

PS. Before you ask: YES! Of course my bedspread has skulls on it!!! I am an archaeologist. I see dead people!

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