More information is coming soon!
Promotion
As of July 1st 2021, I have been promoted to an associate professor/senior lecturer/dósent in medieval Icelandic literature at the University of Iceland.
New university degree: Postgraduate Diploma in Teaching Studies for Higher Education (2021)
Chat with the German ambassador in Iceland
Dietrich Becker and Jan Alexander van Nahl talking about the Icelandic language, medieval literature, and beach chairs. See the full chat here.
New review: RE:Writing. Medial perspectives on textual culture in the Icelandic Middle Ages
Jan Alexander van Nahl 2021: Review of RE:Writing. Medial perspectives on textual culture in the Icelandic Middle Ages, ed.
/ (Medienwandel – Medienwechsel – Medienwissen 29), Zürich 2018. In: Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur 150, pp. 265-270.Topics Board Editor: Humanities
I have been appointed as topic editor of the MDPI journal "Humanities" (ISSN 2076-0787) for two years. "Humanities" is listed in ERIH PLUS, and has been awarded the DOAJ Seal for best practice in open access publishing.
New review: Structures and Origins of the Twelfth-Century Renaissance
Jan Alexander van Nahl 2021: Review of Peter Dinzelbacher, Structures and Origins of the Twelfth-Century ‘Renaissance’. Monographien zur Geschichte des Mittelalters 63. Stuttgart: Anton Hiersemann, 2017, 343 pp. In: Mediaevistik 33, pp. 454-456.
International conference
I participate with a lecture on "Half-Remembering and Half-Forgetting – Teaching the (Medieval) Past Today" within "Session 2C: The democratic role of universities", Thursday, March 25th, 13.00–15.00.
New publication: "Náttvíg eru morðvíg. Dunkelheit und Nacht in der Egils saga Skallagrímssonar"
Available as open access here.
In: Res, Artes et Religio: Essays in Honour of Rudolf Simek. Edited by Sabine Heidi Walther, Regina Jucknies, Judith Meurer-Bongardt, Jens Eike Schnall, in collaboration with Brigitta Jaroschek, Sarah Onkels. Literature and Culture 1. Leeds: Kısmet Press, 2021. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Available at http://kismet.press/portfolio/res-artes-et-religio.
Doktorspróf hið meira
Funding of new research project
As of 2021, my new two-year research project "Night and Darkness in the Sagas of Icelanders" will be funded by the Rannsóknasjóður Háskóla Íslands with 1.4 million ÍSK (9.000 EUR).
My previous contributions:
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- "Náttvíg eru morðvíg". Dunkelheit und Nacht in der Egils saga Skallagrímssonar [Nighttime Manslaughter is Murder. Darkness in Night in Egils saga Skallagrímssonar]. In: Sabine Walther et al. (eds.), Res, Artes et Religio. Essays in Honour of Rudolf Simek. Leeds 2020, pp. 461–477.
- „Dag né nótt" – Hlutverk myrkurs í Egils sögu Skalla-Grímssonar [Day nor Night – The Significance of Darkness in Egils saga Skalla-Grímssonar] (Hugvísindaþing 2019, Reykjavík).
- "Die Nacht ist es, die alles werden lässt." Zur Rolle von Dunkelheit und Nacht in den Isländersagas [Night Gives Birth to Everything. On the role of Darkness and Night in the Sagas of Icelanders] (17. Internationale Saga-Konferenz, Reykjavík).
Habilitation
As of December 16th 2020, I have officially completed my habilitation at the University of Munich, and have received my venia legendi for the field of "Nordische Philologie" (Scandinavian Studies).
More infos on my habilitation thesis can be found here (German/English).
And some extra information for those interested: "Habilitation is a qualification required in order to conduct self-contained university teaching, and to obtain a professorship in many European countries. … Habilitation is the highest qualification issued through the process of a university examination, and remains a core concept of scholarly careers in these countries. … Once the habilitation thesis (Habilitationsschrift) and all other requirements are completed, the candidate "has habilitated him- or herself" and receives the degree Dr. habil. … A distinct procedure, but a formality after completing the habilitation, is officially receiving the venia legendi, Latin for "permission for lecturing" a specific academic subject at universities for a lifetime." (Wikipedia)
Open Researcher and Contributor ID
You can now see many of my publications on my ORCID page.
New review: Krisen, Kriege, Katastrophen
Christian Rohr / Ursula Bieber / Katharina Zeppezauer-Wachauer (Hg.): Krisen, Kriege, Katastrophen. Zum Umgang mit Angst und Bedrohung im Mittelalter. Universitätsverlag Winter, Heidelberg 2018.
In: Literaturkritik 10/2020, open access.
University lecture: "Er myrkva tók". Zur Ambiguität von Dunkelheit und Nacht in der Sagaliteratur
21.10.2020; Ludwig Maximilians-Universität München, Fakultät für Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaften