Sinopsis
Brute Norse is a blog and podcast about Norse culture and viking weirdness by Eirik Storesund.
Episodios
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33: Subterranean Yuletide Extravaganza 2020
20/12/2020 Duración: 29minA hellish episode for a hellish year. Recorded in tribute to the folkloric forces that terrorized the Norwegian countryside in the sacred season. Respecting the return of the ancestral dead, the mischief of the Hidden Folk, and the hauntings of trolls, ghosts, and goblins who made the yuletide feast the cornucopia of blood-curdling coziness that all Scandinavians dreaded and cherished. Bake no bread, spin no thread: The Wild Hunt is on the loose! Featuring themes arranged by Helge Taksdal. Support Brute Norse: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse Learn more about the Norse lunisolar calendar here: https://www.brutenorse.com/blog/2017/12/norse-yuletide-sacrifices-had-almost.html
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32: The Unspeakable Cults of Gothiscandza (w/ Krister Vasshus & Laurine Albris)
20/11/2020 Duración: 01h53minBeginning as an attempt at a conversation on the enduring memory of ancient tribes in the Norwegian county system, and the erasure of their memory in the face of modern centralization, onomastician Krister Vasshus and archaeologist Laurine Albris joins the podcast for a numinous discussion that soon evolves in the direction of pagan place names and some of the stranger cult sites the North can offer, including some shocking new reveals from the frontlines of Nordic Iron Age archaeology. Support Brute Norse @ https://linktr.ee/brutenorse Some referenced works: - Bjorvand, Harald et. al. (2019). Irilien på Øverby i Vingulmark. Viking: Norsk arkeologisk årbok, årgang 82. - Olsen, Magnus (1905). Det gamle norske ønavn Njarðarlog - Bergsveinn Birgisson (2014). Den svarte vikingen. - Universitetsmuseet (UiB). «Enestående funn av hedensk gudehov fra yngre jernalder» [Last downloaded Nov. 19. 2020: https://tinyurl.com/y5suz8al] - Grundvad, Lars & Laurine Albris (2020). Afdækning af fænomenet hørg fra yngre jern
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31: Do Viking Androids Dream of Electric Ships? AI Generated Scandifuturist Pulp Fiction
06/10/2020 Duración: 19minIn this absolute nonsense episode, a chat bot by the name of AI Dungeon is harnessed to generate a grim saga about a eunuch miner living in a dystopian interstellar civilization ruled by an evil supercomputer sacred king. For anything Brute Norse related: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse Created via: https://play.aidungeon.io/
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30: Did Norse Religion Exist? Authenticity & Religious Adjacency with Adrian Johansen Rinde
15/09/2020 Duración: 01h10minWhat is religion? Originally, Viking Era Scandinavians had no concept of "religion" as we understand it, and yet it is their supposed religiosity that most profoundly shapes our understanding of who they were. What do we actually mean when we say this word, and which preconceptions are we imposing on the ancient mind by using it? Are there religious aspects to our own culture that we don't even acknowledge as such? In this episode I am joined by scholar of Religious Didactics at the University of Stavanger, Norway, and one half of the Black Metal two-piece Dødsengel, Adrian Johansen Rinde for a discussion on religion, authenticity, and tradition (both upper and lower case). For shirts, videos, and anything Brute Norse: https://linktr.ee/brutenorse
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Ep. 29: Heaven is a Place on Earth (Valhalla pt. 3)
17/08/2020 Duración: 01h12minWhen not one, but two 8th century mass graves emerged on the beaches of Salme in Saaremaa, Estonia, it marked a new chapter in scholarly inquiry into the Viking Era. Thoughtfully propped up in two military rowing vessels, sitting side by side, and stacked on top of each other, respectively, these 40 or so Scandinavian raiders received graves as shallow as they were ritualistic. The finds brought renewed interest in the historical origins of viking piracy. A culture that came of age with the professionalization of the Germanic warband in the Roman Iron Age, which led to the emergence of a self-insistent aristocratic class, who built their identity around war, feasting, and huge halls. But their primitive adolescence goes even further back, to a dim past of steppe raiding-economies, and eerie coming of age rituals. And yet, one may discern the glimmer of an influence not quite of this world, of a new religion with the promise of a shimmering afterlife in the presence of the Lord. In this episode, Brute Norse a
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Episode 28: To Valhalla? Norse myth, the military, & the nazis (Valhalla Pt. 2)
19/07/2020 Duración: 34minWhen the soldiers of the 4th Mechanized Infantry Company of the Telemark Battalion rallied around Major Rune Wenneberg, their battle cry was a rite that solidified a sense of camaraderie between them, and helped them adjust to the reality of putting their bodies at the disposal of the international war machine. But as the words "To Valhalla!" rang out between the hills of northern Afghanistan, they did not yet know that this was the cry that would awaken Norway, almost a decade too late, to the reality of Norway's role in military operations abroad. The public erupted in a series of debates, wrestling to make sense of a warrior ideology that had apparently operated in secrecy under their very noses. Everyone from the tabloids to the Church, and the Defence Authority itself, poked at everything from toxic masculinity to the Nazi occult for answers. When perhaps what they should have done first of all, was look themselves in the mirror. This episode also explores the myth and reality of appropriation of Norse
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Ep. 27: World on a Wire, Norse Cosmology, and Heroic Death (Valhalla interlude)
11/05/2020 Duración: 30minBrute Norse goes to the movies in this spoiler saturated interlude to the series on Valhalla. What are the gods, and how do they see us? With its unsettling depiction of a simulated reality, Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s 1973 sci-fi masterpiece «World on a Wire» (Welt am Draht) is an oft cited example of a film way ahead of its time. In this episode, we’re going to turn that claim upside down and let the mythic merge with the cybernetic, using the film as an opportunity for a Scandifuturist reading of Norse Pre-Christian cosmology, and notions of heroic transcendence. Support Brute Norse! https://patreon.com/brutenorse https://teespring.com/stores/brute-norse SoME: @Brutenorse Mentioned works: - Fassbinder, Rainer Werner (1973). World on a Wire: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070904/ - Fragasso, Claudio (1990). Troll 2: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105643/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1 - Heide, Eldar (2014). Contradictory Cosmology in Old Norse Myth & Religion - But still a system? https://www.academia.edu/7454838/Contr
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Ep. 26: Valhalla Pt. 1 - Fight for your right to party
09/04/2020 Duración: 44minIn the midst of the crumbling and plague ridden Yankee Empire, Eirik plots to evacuate New Jorvik and relive the Migration Era by conquering the Mosel. But if he dies trying, where will he go? What is Valhalla anyway, and what do we know about Norse mythology's most iconic afterlife location? In this episode we brave Odin's storm, and wade through tides of iron to attend the raven's feast. All to look at the research history of this extravagant warrior paradise. It's a meandering road through source-critical pitfalls, deadly ancestral cliffs, and the grotesque aesthetics of Viking Era warrior poets. Support and follow Brute Norse! www.Patreon.com/Brutenorse www.teespring.com/stores/brute-norse www.instagram.com/brutenorse www.twitter.com/brutenorse Some sources for this episode: - Bergsveinn Birgisson (2003). Å elska med øyreløs hund og skummel død. Nordica Bergensia 29 - 2003. University of Bergen - Nordberg, Andreas (2004). Krigarna i Odins sal. Dödsföreställningar och krigarkult i fornnordisk religio
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Ep. 25: Valhalla (Prologue) - The Temple of Reluctant Gods
08/02/2020 Duración: 43minMyth speaks of an exclusive community of dead warriors, whose sacrifices in service for their divine monarch granted them access to live in a grand hall, where they would be served and entertained by young maidens, and continue their fight on a cosmic scale from the spectral realm in perpetuity. In this episode we explore the development, consequences, and controversies of the idea and location of Yasukuni Jinja, where 2,5 million of Japan's military dead are enshrined and venerated as gods. We trace its humble origins as a war memorial, circus venue, and pacifying ground to soothe angry warrior ghosts, to its more infamous stage as a spiritual meat grinder of the State Shinto Military Industrial Complex, able to transform young men into national deities on an industrial scale. A cautionary tale against romanticizing death and martyrdom, this episode explores how the Imperial State manipulated aesthetics and indigenous beliefs for immediate military gains. We meet the Christian existentialist kamikaze pilo
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Episode 24: Legends of Drunken Master - The Miracles of St. Thorlak (2019 Holiday Special)
16/12/2019 Duración: 28minIn this slightly festive Yuletide episode, Eirik retells some of his favorite miracles associated with Iceland's first (and only) Christian holy man: The frail, picky eating, voluntary celibate, 12th century bishop Þorlákr Þórhallsson. Patron saint of Iceland - and autism! Thorlak was a renowned sage who hardly ever touched a drink unless it was alcoholic. He channeled his divine superpowers to heal the mangled, clobber wildlife, punish bullies, and make beer both strong and tasty. The episode also touches upon various tidbits of seasonally appropriate errata, such as the mysterious lost Scandinavian saint Sjur, Medieval ethnic stereotypes about sausage-eating Icelanders, and the freshest old news on the Norse lunisolar calendar. Get wiseer about the pre-Christian holiday of Jól: https://www.brutenorse.com/blog/2017/12/norse-yuletide-sacrifices-had-almost.html Looking for a pre-christian lunisolar almanac that fits in your pocket? Check out KwellonTungl: https://www.etsy.com/shop/KwellonTungl Support Brut
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Ep. 23: Japan's Barbarian Past
21/11/2019 Duración: 47minIn this episode Eirik recounts his Japonic yuletide odyssey of 2018. He takes a comparative, Scandifuturist look at the prehistory of Japan through the Jōmon, Yayoi, and Kofun periods. It's the story of how hunter-gatherer master potters met their demise at the hands of militant, kami-fearing, rice-farming, mound building, Iron Age settlers from the Asian mainland. Strolling backwards with a voyeur's gaze from the streets of Tokyo to the valleys of Gifu, as Japan is staged as a fellow barbarian periphery beyond the ghost of the Roman Empire, to question Classical and Post-Enlightenment assumptions about how humanity ought to cope with the terror of the past, handing out wedgies to the Western canon and national mythologies as we go. Support Brute Norse: www.brutenorse.com www.twitter.com/brutenorse www.instagram.com/brutenorse www.patreon.com/brutenorse www.teespring.com/stores/brute-norse Suggested reading: - Imamura, Keiji (2003). Prehistoric Japan: New Perspectives on Insular East Asia. Routledge: Londo
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Ep. 22: The Bronze Age Flasher (With Aksel Klausen)
18/10/2019 Duración: 01h08minAksel returns to the podcast for banter-filled spitballing on ancient Scandinavia and new old news from European prehistory. Whatever happened to that frickin’ viking ship (?) from episode 14, and what's up with these Viking Era mortuary houses? Some of the subjects tackled: - The Crossroads exhibit at the Art & History Museum, Brussels. - Migration period identity. - Aksel's time travel hitlist. - Preliminary results from the Gjellestad ship excavation. - Democratization of Viking burial practice. - A phallic stone from Bronze Age Sweden. - Iron Age mortuary houses. - Eirik's dream burial. - Hollow promises of future podcast subjects. - The afterlife, reincarnation, and Germanic naming conventions. Support Brute Norse: www.Patreon.com/brutenorse www.teespring.com/stores/brute-norse -Topical links- Help name the new moons of Saturn: https://carnegiescience.edu/NameSaturnsMoons Why are adult daughters missing from ancient German cemeteries? https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/10/why-are-adult-daughters
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Ep. 21: Discussing Dharma with Leornende Eald Englisc
02/09/2019 Duración: 01h07minWhat drives you? In this episode, Eirik sits down for a talk with Kevin from Leornende Eald Englisc, who makes educational youtube videos on Old English informed by his particular spiritual convictions. We talk about linguistics, the problem with translations, old Germanic languages, cosmic law, accepting the passage of history, devotinal service, and the importance of good intent and deeds. May we be reborn and do good deeds again! Watch Kevin's content here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLnwScGuOxVlaN5aV9in9ag Mentioned works: Peter Wessel Zapffe, The Last Messiah https://philosophynow.org/issues/45/The_Last_Messiah Bhagavad Gita https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhagavad_Gita Sallust, On the Gods and the World https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Sallust_On_the_Gods_and_the_World
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Ep. 20: The Antenna on the Holy Mountain
26/07/2019 Duración: 40minThe natural sciences talk avidly about the geosphere, biosphere, atmosphere, and so on. Less so about the noösphere. The noösphere is the sphere of mind. A term that allows us to conceive of consciousness and information exchange, not just as abstract philosophical notions, but as a massively tangible cosmic force with a concrete, observable influence on the physical world. In this episode Eirik reads his essay "The Antenna on the Holy Mountain: Noöspheric meditations on the Norse cargo cult", originally commissioned by the Canadian artist Erin Sexton for the 2018 Noöspherics conference at Lydgalleriet in Bergen, where it formed the introductory chapter to the conference book. Written in the shadow of Norway's decision to abandon FM radio for new, digital solutions, this essay explores the noöspheric proposition that our intelligence extends beyond our physical bodies, drawing on crisis, technological collapse, extraterrestrial exploration, and religious ritual, and the noösphere's implications for Eirik's
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Ep. 19: Norway's Eternal Return
30/06/2019 Duración: 01h12minIn this episode Eirik takes an eldritch look at Norwegian identity, from the mythology and dreams of Iron Age expansionists to the national mythology of state bureaucracy. He attempts to negotiate between the representation, artifice and organism of Norwegianness itself, drawing on Thure Erik Lund's oddball idea of the "True" versus "Norwegian" Norwegians and Nick Land's concept of hyperstition, realizing his own participation in the ongoing ritualization that keeps the Norwegian creature alive.
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Ep. 18: Beer in Norse Culture pt.2 - "Baptized in Beer"
04/05/2019 Duración: 42minThe saga continues with an exploration of the vocabulary, material culture, and social status of beer in Iron Age and Medieval Scandinavia. We look at different terms for beer in the Old Norse language and discern their differences, from Old Norse ǫl, mungát, and bjórr to modern ale and beer, with an intimate look at the "Nordic grog" of Scandinavian prehistory, before we venture up to the many festivities of Nordic peasants up until the bacchanalian festivals of Medieval guilds. Also more or less mentioned: - Household sacrifices - Ale runes - Yeast necromancy - The drunken Germanic war machine - No pets in the guild hall Support Brute Norse on: https://patreon.com/brutenorse https://teespring.com/stores/brute-norse
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Ep. 17: Beer in Norse Culture pt. 1 - "Not All Ales Are Alike"
26/04/2019 Duración: 39minJoin Eirik for an invigorating dip into the crooked creek that is the history of beer and brewing in Iron Age and Medieval Scandinavia, with some serious side-eye to the later Nordic farmhouse brewing tradition. In this episode we will cover what exactly beer is, and what separates the global industrial brewery from its historical household counterpart. Cheers! Support Brute Norse: www.patreon.com/brutenorse www.teespring.com/stores/brute-norse Music: Edvard Grieg, "Aa grisen hadde eit tryne"/ "Oh, the pig he had a snout" performed by Papalin
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Ep. 16: Kinky Runestones from Outer Space
22/02/2019 Duración: 41minJoin Eirik for a counter-cultural walk on the wild side as he looks at some of his favorite pieces of bogus and fringe literature on the subject of pre-Christian Scandinavia, from Kjell Aartun's runic sex cults to the seedy, folk-etymological mysteries of the so-called Bock Saga, before finally landing on the forgotten, acid drenched sci-fi works of Norway's favorite outlaw, the infamous Black Metal musician Varg Vikernes. To support Brute Norse: www.patreon.com/brutenorse www.teespring.com/stores/brute-norse
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Ep. 15: Pagan Christmas
14/12/2018 Duración: 23minIn this episode Eirik shares what the holidays mean to him as a homesick barbarian/contrarian, and covers some of the many yuletide horrors past folks had to put up with. And concerning the paganism of Christmas: Norse religious festivals were determined according to a lunisolar calendar, so when exactly did the vikings celebrate jól, what exactly is its relationship to the winter solstice, and why does any of that matter to you and me?
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Ep. 14: The Archaeology of Evil Dead
29/11/2018 Duración: 01h17minIn this episode, Eirik and Aksel catch up after several months of disconnect and get up to speed with some of their favorite archaeological news of 2018. They speculate on the contents of prehistoric alcoholic beverages, muse on recent incidents on North Sentinel Island, analyze Danish gang wars in light of warlike honor-shame societies and Norse sexual defamation, look at the so-called Staffordshire hoard helmet, and find some odd historical parallels to the Evil Dead franchise.