A Cultural Landscape beyond the Infield/Outfield Categories: An Example from Eastern Norway |
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Authors: | Ingunn Holm |
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Abstract: | In this study from Eastern Norway the relationship between people in the past and their surroundings is discussed, emphasizing the relationship between outfield/infield. In Norwegian folklore, the outfield has been looked upon as a hostile environment. Archaeologists have, more or less consciously, used this as an analogy for the Iron Age and medieval period. The Old Norse worldview as it is presented in the Old Norse literature is discussed and confronted with new archaeological data. The relationship between outfield/infield is examined with a view to going beyond the established categories in order to grasp the diversity of the human past by confronting the notion of infield/outfield with new archaeological information. The division between outfield/infield was probably less marked in the Iron Age and the medieval period. Research concerning these periods should allow scope for both the ethnic variety and the broad variety of occupations that we find in the outfields of Norway. |
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