Old Norse Sheds New Light in the Humanities Department
By: Mycah Houser
This semester, Trine鈥檚 Humanities department kickstarted a new 鈥淥ld Norse鈥 class where students have been learning to speak the language. In a STEM-focused school, this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The independent study is taught by Dr. Mayus, who specializes in Medieval Studies.
In this course, students have been translating texts such as 鈥淗rolf鈥檚 Saga鈥 from Old Norse into modern English.
鈥淲e鈥檝e translated only a chapter of the saga, but for three students who knew nothing about the language coming into the course, I think how fast we鈥檙e moving along is really impressive,鈥 Beatrice Snavely, a student in this course, said.
Beatrice鈥檚 interest was peaked last year when she took Viking Literature with Dr. Mayus. Students of all majors learned about Icelandic history and read various Icelandic sagas, ranging from The Prose Edda to The Saga of the Volsungs.
These unique classes are also engaging for non-Humanities students.
鈥淢y required courses are always grounded in theory and math practice, so it was nice that in Viking Lit there wasn鈥檛 one correct answer in what you thought,鈥 Lake Wann, an electrical engineer who took Viking Literature, said, 鈥淓ngineers can鈥檛 really have an academic discussion about how transistors or logic gates make them feel, but in Viking Lit we could debate if a blood feud was petty or justified.鈥
Old Norse and Viking Literature are complemented by History of the English Language, where students trace the evolution of the English language from its Germanic roots. This bi-annual class provides a linguistic basis that students can carry over to specialty courses such as Old Norse.
Keep an eye out for these unique courses鈥攜ou may never have the chance again!