![]() ![]() Its inhabitants are marching towards the end of time. "And unlike Greek and Roman myths, they portray a world which is finite. "The Norse myths are important because they take place in a landscape which for people in Britain and the English-speaking world, we recognise as being like our own," Professor Larrington tells BBC Culture. The joy of reading is to commune with other people through the stories they have left behind – but to recognise in their worlds something of our own.Ī new book, The Norse Myths that Shape the Way We Think by Carolyne Larrington, a professor at Oxford University, explores the contemporary resonances of Norse myths, and examines their reimagining in popular culture. Reading stories from centuries' past, it's reassuring to discover that while times change, human instincts and emotions are more constant and universal. ![]() ![]() The stories we tell reflect who we are, as both individuals and societies, at any given time. In this discipline, the premise that there are seven basic plots (as outlined in a book of the same name by Christopher Booker) holds sway. ![]() I am a novelist, and teach creative writing. We give them a turn and they make new and curious combinations." This is particularly true of storytelling. We simply take a lot of old ideas and put them into a sort of mental kaleidoscope. The US writer Mark Twain famously wrote: "There is no such thing as a new idea. ![]()
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