Bog Buddies! A minimally edited, community-driven panel show by and for the Scandifuturist Power Walking Club, dwelling in the muddy margins of the Brute Norse cyber-meadhall. Today we return to air our joys and grievances about Robert Eggers' viking film, The Northman (more joys than grievances, truth be told), and unveil the horrific esoteric layers of the movie that neither of us were prepared to face. For all things Brute Norse, see: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse
In this ghoulish episode we'll be looking at magic and sorcery in literary transmission while Eirik wrestles with his own personal demons. Focusing on the legend-steeped early modern grimoire tradition in Norway, we start our Faustian adventure with the question of runic magic and its developments towards the peak of runic literacy in the High Middle Ages. Before we go on to discuss the influence of continental sorcery, and ultimately the appearance of grimoires on the Scandinavian occult horizon. Buy my book "Love Spells and Erotic Sorcery in Norwegian Folk Magic" at https://brutenorse.bigcartel.com/ For all things Brute Norse, see: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse Featuring musical arrangements by Helge Taksdal. Musical contribution by Darya & Månskensorkestern: https://daryamnskensorkestern.bandcamp.com/ Some relevant works: - Bang, Anton Christian (1902). Norske Hexeformularer og magiske opskrifter. Brøggers Bogtrykkeri: Kristiania. - Flowers, Stephen. 1989. The Galdrabók: An Ice...
Stefan Lakatos joins Brute Norse to talk about the life and work of his friend and teacher, the blind avant-garde composer, poet, pamphleteer, and hobo philosopher Louis Thomas Hardin, aka. Moondog, "The Viking of 6th Avenue". Among other things, discussing the musicology of Moondog and his fascination with Norse Mythology. Features music composed by Moondog and performed by Stefan Lakatos and Andreas Heuser, and eletronic arrangements by Helge Taksdal. https:linktr.ee/brutenorse Some relevant links and references: https://www.moondogscorner.de - Scotto, Robert (2007). Moondog: The viking of 6th avenue. Process Media: Los Angeles - Moondog (Transl: Marie-Hélène Estève) (2016). 50 Couplets. Lenka Lente
A fresh concept on the BN podcast: It's the Bog Buddies! Occasional informal, community driven discussions on topical matters. Today we discuss hopes and fears concerning Robert Eggers' upcoming Viking blockbuster: THE NORTHMAN. We pick apart the material culture as best we can based on the trailer, and muse wildly about the strengths and pitfalls of so-called historical cinema.
In this episode we're putting the ass back in Christmas with a seasonably appropriate reading of two Old Norse tales taken from Flateyrjarbók: Þorleifs þáttr jarlaskálds, a sizzling holiday story about vengeance, sorcery, and fake beards. And Þorsteins þáttr skelks, an outhouse-themed ghost story featuring all the hottest gossip on the suffering of ancient heroes. Support Brute Norse: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse With musical contributions from Langsomt Mot Nord, and Helge Taksdal. Relevant links: Langsomt Mot Nord: https://www.langsomtmotnord.no/ Nordberg, Andreas (2006). Jul, disting och förkyrklig tideräkning: https://www.academia.edu/1366945/Jul_disting_och_f%C3%B6rkyrklig_tider%C3%A4kning Storesund, Eirik (2017): The Yuletide Sacrifices had (Almost) Nothing to do with the Winter Solstice: https://www.brutenorse.com/blog/2017/12/norse-yuletide-sacrifices-had-almost.html
In this episode we explore the life and times of the pioneering Icelandic saga translator, historian, womanizer, drunkard, witch-defender, and murderer Thormod Torfæus (1636-1719). Following him from the miseries and nerdery of his native Iceland, to the jingoistic opulence of the Danish court, and finally to the shores of Norway. A voyage through the utter insanity of Early Modern scholarship. A world of grand claims, lovecraftian grimoires, espionage, crimes against humanity, narwhal-ivory-snorting alchemists, and the meandering chaos of a life that eerily paralleled that of the anti-heroes of ancient Scandinavia. Support Brute Norse: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse Naaljos Ljom: https://naaljosljom.bandcamp.com/ Scattered referenced works and citations: - Bergsveinn Birgisson (2020). Mannen fra middelalderen: Historikeren og morderen Tormod Torfæus. Vigmostad og Bjørke. - King, David (2005). Finding Atlantis: A true story of genius, madness, and an extraordinary quest for a lost world. Harmony. - Torfæus, Tormod (2008-2014). Norges Historie, Vol 1-6. Torgrim Titlestad (ed.) Eide forlag. - Various (2001). Tormod Torfæus: ei innføring. Torgrim Titlestad (ed.). Erling Skjalgssonselskapet.
Join Eirik on a virtual tour spanning years in the thousands, but all in one spot: Avaldsnes on the isle of Karmøy. Norway's birthplace, at least if the local tourist board has anything to say about it. An episode of nostalgia and archaeo-historical hypersaturation in an ancient center of power where myth, legend, and history intersect. Support Brute Norse: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse Some references: - Bergsveinn Birgisson (2013). Den svarte vikingen. Spartacus. - Ilkjær, Jørgen (2000). Den første norgeshistorien: Illerupfunnet, ny innsikt i skandinavisk romertid. Kulturhistorisk Forlag. - Ilkjær, Jørgen (2002). Illerup Ådal: Archaeology as a Magic Mirror. Moesgård Museum. - Klausen, Aksel (2013). The Flagghaug prince - Rome's foe? A Late Roman Iron Age weapon grave from Avaldsnes. MA Thesis. University fo Bergen. - Opedal, Arnfrid (1998). De glemte skipsgravene: Makt og myter på Avaldsnes. AmS småtrykk. - Østmo, Einar (2020). The History of the Norvegr 2000 BC-1000 AD, In Dagfinn Skre (ed.), Rulership in 1st to 14th century Scandinavia. Royal graves and sites at Avaldsnes and beyond. Walter de Gruyter.
The present is inevitably haunted by the past. A cluttered past. Order and chaos spill over and onto each other. The past onto the present, and the present onto the past. Academically, this causes many potential problems: Will data saturation force us to reinvent the way we deal with the past? Will the fragility of modern tech create gaps in the knowledge our descendants will have about us? Is linear time a sham? How will we cope with pastness in the inevitable clutter of the Anthropocene? We're just rolling with the punches! But first of all, let us shed some of the historicist paradigms we've grown all too accustomed to. In this episode of high Scandifuturism, archaeologist Stein Farstadvoll (@wasteunearthed)comes on to question the one-track-mind of linearity and explore barbarian ontologies. https://unrulyheritage.com/ Stein Farstadvoll on ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Stein-Farstadvoll Some referenced works: - Benjamin, Walter (1940). Theses on the Philosophy of History. - Eliade, Mirchea (1949). The Myth of the Eternal Return. - Lund, Thure Erik (2000). Om naturen. - Lund, Thure Erik (2006). Om de nye norske byene. - Mayhem (1994). De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas. - Nietzsche, Friedrich (1896). Thus Spoke Zarathustra. - Storesund, Eirik (2017). The Trollish Theory of Art. - Tusmørke: https://tusm-rke.bandcamp.com.
... and the demise of the electric Aryo-Germanic hermaphrodite elites from Atlantis at the hands of wanton Mediterranean excess, and an erotic treatise on Austro-German inferiority complexes at the start of the 20th century, as illustrated by the völkisch movements and feverish Ariosophical nonsense. With a guest performance by Swedish enfant terrible Johnny Bode." Deliver us oh lord from the wrath of the apelings! Support BN: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse SOME MENTIONED WORKS AND SOURCES: - Emberland, Terje (2012). Himmlers Norge. Humanist forlag. - Emberland, Terje (2003). Religion og rase: Nyhedenskap og nazisme i Norge 1933-1945. Humanist forlag. - Goodrich-Clarke, Nicholas(2005). The Occult Roots of Nazism. Tauris Parke. - Lenthe, Eckehard (2019), Annabel Lee (transl.). Wotan's Awakening. Dominion press. https://dominionpress.bigcartel.com - Liebenfels, Jörg Lanz von (1905/????). Theozoology, or the Science of the Sodomite Apelings and the Divine Electron. An introduction to t...
Few things about Norse paganism are as misunderstood or -represented as the practice of seiðr, and that's saying something. But if there is one single man that stands firm as mountain, jutting forth from the sea of quackery, that man is Eldar Heide. Linguist, Old Norse philologist, maritime conservationist, ski-tree-jumper. Pioneer of retrospective methods, and one of the main minds behind the prevailing paradigm of Norse magic, and its fascinating connection to the pre-Christian religion of the Fenno-Scandinavian Sami. A wacky world of textiles, bodily orifices, magic missiles, breath (good and bad!), and sexual taboos await! You can find most of Eldar's work here: https://www.Eldar-heide.net Support Brute Norse at: https://www.linktr.ee/brutenorse Some relevant or mentioned works: - Gardeła, Leszek (2016). (Magic) Staffs in the Viking Age. - Meulengracht Sørensen, Preben (1983). The Unmanly Man. - Price, Neil (2002). The Viking Way: Religion and War in Late Iron Age Scandiavia.