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Flyting

Flyting or fliting (Classical Gaelic: immarbág, Irish: iomarbháigh, lit. "counter-boasting"),[3] is a contest consisting of the exchange of insults between two parties, often conducted in verse.[4]

1545 woodcut by Lucas Cranach referencing (and possibly illustrating) flyting. German peasants respond to a papal bull of Pope Paul III. Caption reads: "Don't frighten us Pope, with your ban, and don't be such a furious man. Otherwise we shall turn around and show you our rears."[1][2]
The Norse gods Freyja and Loki flyte in an illustration (1895) by Lorenz Frølich

Etymology edit

The word flyting comes from the Old English verb flītan meaning 'to quarrel', made into a gerund with the suffix -ing. Attested from around 1200 in the general sense of a verbal quarrel, it is first found as a technical literary term in Scotland in the sixteenth century.[5] The first written Scots example[6] is William Dunbar, The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie, written in the late fifteenth century.[7]

Description edit

I will no longer keep it secret:
it was with thy sister
thou hadst such a son
hardly worse than thyself.

Lokasenna

Like ane boisteous bull, ye rin and ryde
Royatouslie, lyke ane rude rubatour
Ay fukkand lyke ane furious fornicatour

Sir David Lyndsay, An Answer quhilk Schir David Lyndsay maid Y Kingis Flyting (The Answer Which Sir David Lyndsay made to the King's Flyting), 1536

Ajax: Thou bitch-wolf's son, canst thou not hear? Feel then.
Thersites: The plague of Greece upon thee, thou mongrel beef-witted lord!

William Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida, Act 2, Scene 1

Flyting is a ritual, poetic exchange of insults practiced mainly between the 5th and 16th centuries. Examples of flyting are found throughout Scots, Ancient, Medieval[8][9] and Modern Celtic, Old English, Middle English and Norse literature involving both historical and mythological figures. The exchanges would become extremely provocative, often involving accusations of cowardice or sexual perversion.

Norse literature contains stories of the gods flyting. For example, in Lokasenna the god Loki insults the other gods in the hall of Ægir. In the poem Hárbarðsljóð, Hárbarðr (generally considered to be Odin in disguise) engages in flyting with Thor.[10]

In the confrontation of Beowulf and Unferð in the poem Beowulf, flytings were used as either a prelude to battle or as a form of combat in their own right.[11]

In Anglo-Saxon England, flyting would take place in a feasting hall. The winner would be decided by the reactions of those watching the exchange. The winner would drink a large cup of beer or mead in victory, then invite the loser to drink as well.[12]

The 13th-century poem The Owl and the Nightingale and Geoffrey Chaucer's Parlement of Foules contain elements of flyting.

Flyting became public entertainment in Scotland in the 15th and 16th centuries, when makars would engage in verbal contests of provocative, often sexual and scatological but highly poetic abuse. Flyting was permitted despite the fact that the penalty for profanities in public was a fine of 20 shillings (over £300 in 2024 prices) for a lord, or a whipping for a servant.[13] James IV and James V encouraged "court flyting" between poets for their entertainment and occasionally engaged with them. The Flyting of Dumbar and Kennedie records a contest between William Dunbar and Walter Kennedy in front of James IV, which includes the earliest recorded use of the word shit as a personal insult.[13] In 1536 the poet Sir David Lyndsay composed a ribald 60-line flyte to James V after the King demanded a response to a flyte.

Flytings appear in several of William Shakespeare's plays. Margaret Galway analysed 13 comic flytings and several other ritual exchanges in the tragedies.[14] Flytings also appear in Nicholas Udall's Ralph Roister Doister and John Still's Gammer Gurton's Needle from the same era.

While flyting died out in Scottish writing after the Middle Ages, it continued for writers of Celtic background. Robert Burns parodied flyting in his poem, "To a Louse", and James Joyce's poem "The Holy Office" is a curse upon society by a bard.[15] Joyce played with the traditional two-character exchange by making one of the characters representing society as a whole.

Similar practices edit

Hilary Mackie has detected in the Iliad a consistent differentiation between representations in Greek of Achaean and Trojan speech,[16] where Achaeans repeatedly engage in public, ritualized abuse: "Achaeans are proficient at blame, while Trojans perform praise poetry."[17]

Taunting songs are present in the Inuit culture, among many others. Flyting can also be found in Arabic poetry in a popular form called naqā’iḍ, as well as the competitive verses of Japanese Haikai.

Echoes of the genre continue into modern poetry. Hugh MacDiarmid's poem A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle, for example, has many passages of flyting in which the poet's opponent is, in effect, the rest of humanity.

Flyting is similar in both form and function to the modern practice of freestyle battles between rappers and the historic practice of the Dozens, a verbal-combat game representing a synthesis of flyting and its Early Modern English descendants with comparable African verbal-combat games such as Ikocha Nkocha.[18]

In the Finnish epic Kalevala, the hero Väinämöinen uses the similar practice of kilpalaulanta (duel singing) to defeat his opponent Joukahainen.

Modern portrayals edit

In "The Roaring Trumpet", part of Harold Shea's introduction to the Norse gods is a flyting between Heimdall and Loki in which Heimdall says, "All insults are untrue. I state facts."

The climactic scene in Rick Riordan's novel The Ship of the Dead consists of a flyting between the protagonist Magnus Chase and the Norse god Loki.

In the Monkey Island video game series, insults are often integral to duels such as sword fighting and arm wrestling.

In Assassin's Creed: Valhalla, in which the protagonist is a Viking themself, players can engage in flyting with various non-playable characters for prestige and other rewards.

Some see the subculture of hip hop music known as Battle rap as a modern expression, providing a platform for two individuals to poetically insult each other.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Nicht Bapst: nicht schreck uns mit deim ban, Und sey nicht so zorniger man. Wir thun sonst ein gegen wehre, Und zeigen dirs Bel vedere"
  2. ^ Edwards Jr, Mark U. (2004-11-19). Luther's Last Battles: Politics and Polemics 1531-46. Fortress Press. p. 199. ISBN 978-1-4514-1398-4.
  3. ^ Vivian Mercier (1962). The Irish Comic Tradition. Oxford University Press. p. 146.
  4. ^ Parks, Ward (1986). "Flyting, Sounding, Debate: Three Verbal Contest Genres". Poetics Today. 7 (3): 439–458. doi:10.2307/1772505. JSTOR 1772505.
  5. ^ "Fliting". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  6. ^ "Dictionaries of the Scots Language:: DOST :: flyting". Retrieved 2023-12-18.
  7. ^ Dunbar, William (1979). "23 The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie". In Kinsley, James (ed.). The Poems of William Dunbar. doi:10.1093/actrade/9780198118886.book.1. ISBN 978-0-19-811888-6. Retrieved 2023-12-18 – via Oxford Scholarly Editions Online.
  8. ^ "Flyting | Scottish verbal contest | Britannica".
  9. ^ Sayers, William (1991). "Serial Defamation in Two Medieval Tales: The Icelandic Ölkofra Þáttr and The Irish Scéla Mucce Meic Dathó" (PDF). Oral Tradition. pp. 35–57. Retrieved 2016-03-16.
  10. ^ Byock, Jesse (1983) [1982]. Feud in the Icelandic Saga. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-08259-1.
  11. ^ Clover, Carol J. (1980). "The Germanic Context of the Unferþ Episode". Speculum. 55 (3): 444–468. doi:10.2307/2847235. ISSN 0038-7134. JSTOR 2847235. S2CID 163023116.
  12. ^ Quaestio: selected proceedings of the Cambridge Colloquium in Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic Volumes 2–3, pp. 43–44, University of Cambridge, 2001.[ISBN missing]
  13. ^ a b Geoffrey Hughes; M.E. Sharpe (2006). An encyclopedia of swearing : the social history of oaths, profanity, foul language, and ethnic slurs in the English-speaking world. M.E. Sharpe. p. 175. ISBN 9780765612311. OCLC 827752811.
  14. ^ Galway, Margaret (1935). "Flyting in Shakspere's Comedies". The Shakespeare Association Bulletin. 10 (4): 183–191. ISSN 0270-8604. JSTOR 23684827.
  15. ^ "flyting." Merriam Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature. Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, 1995. Literature Resource Center.
  16. ^ Mackie, Hilary Susan (1996). Talking Trojan: Speech and Community in the Iliad. Lanham MD: Rowmann & Littlefield. ISBN 0-8476-8254-4., reviewed by Joshua T. Katz in Language 74.2 (1998) pp. 408–09.
  17. ^ Mackie 1996:83.
  18. ^ Johnson, Simon (2008-12-28). "Rap music originated in medieval Scottish pubs, claims American professor". telegraph.co.uk. Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 2008-12-30. Professor Ferenc Szasz argued that so-called rap battles, where two or more performers trade elaborate insults, derive from the ancient Caledonian art of "flyting." According to the theory, Scottish slave owners took the tradition with them to the United States, where it was adopted and developed by slaves, emerging many years later as rap; see also John Dollard, "The Dozens: the dialect of insult", American Image 1 (1939), pp. 3–24; Roger D. Abrahams, "Playing the dozens", Journal of American Folklore 75 (1962), pp. 209–18.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Flyting at Wikimedia Commons
  • Flyting – britannica.com

flyting, fliting, classical, gaelic, immarbág, irish, iomarbháigh, counter, boasting, contest, consisting, exchange, insults, between, parties, often, conducted, verse, 1545, woodcut, lucas, cranach, referencing, possibly, illustrating, flyting, german, peasan. Flyting or fliting Classical Gaelic immarbag Irish iomarbhaigh lit counter boasting 3 is a contest consisting of the exchange of insults between two parties often conducted in verse 4 1545 woodcut by Lucas Cranach referencing and possibly illustrating flyting German peasants respond to a papal bull of Pope Paul III Caption reads Don t frighten us Pope with your ban and don t be such a furious man Otherwise we shall turn around and show you our rears 1 2 The Norse gods Freyja and Loki flyte in an illustration 1895 by Lorenz Frolich Contents 1 Etymology 2 Description 3 Similar practices 4 Modern portrayals 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External linksEtymology editThe word flyting comes from the Old English verb flitan meaning to quarrel made into a gerund with the suffix ing Attested from around 1200 in the general sense of a verbal quarrel it is first found as a technical literary term in Scotland in the sixteenth century 5 The first written Scots example 6 is William Dunbar The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie written in the late fifteenth century 7 Description editI will no longer keep it secret it was with thy sisterthou hadst such a sonhardly worse than thyself Lokasenna Like ane boisteous bull ye rin and rydeRoyatouslie lyke ane rude rubatourAy fukkand lyke ane furious fornicatour Sir David Lyndsay An Answer quhilk Schir David Lyndsay maid Y Kingis Flyting The Answer Which Sir David Lyndsay made to the King s Flyting 1536 Ajax Thou bitch wolf s son canst thou not hear Feel then Thersites The plague of Greece upon thee thou mongrel beef witted lord William Shakespeare Troilus and Cressida Act 2 Scene 1 Flyting is a ritual poetic exchange of insults practiced mainly between the 5th and 16th centuries Examples of flyting are found throughout Scots Ancient Medieval 8 9 and Modern Celtic Old English Middle English and Norse literature involving both historical and mythological figures The exchanges would become extremely provocative often involving accusations of cowardice or sexual perversion Norse literature contains stories of the gods flyting For example in Lokasenna the god Loki insults the other gods in the hall of AEgir In the poem Harbardsljod Harbardr generally considered to be Odin in disguise engages in flyting with Thor 10 In the confrontation of Beowulf and Unferd in the poem Beowulf flytings were used as either a prelude to battle or as a form of combat in their own right 11 In Anglo Saxon England flyting would take place in a feasting hall The winner would be decided by the reactions of those watching the exchange The winner would drink a large cup of beer or mead in victory then invite the loser to drink as well 12 The 13th century poem The Owl and the Nightingale and Geoffrey Chaucer s Parlement of Foules contain elements of flyting Flyting became public entertainment in Scotland in the 15th and 16th centuries when makars would engage in verbal contests of provocative often sexual and scatological but highly poetic abuse Flyting was permitted despite the fact that the penalty for profanities in public was a fine of 20 shillings over 300 in 2024 prices for a lord or a whipping for a servant 13 James IV and James V encouraged court flyting between poets for their entertainment and occasionally engaged with them The Flyting of Dumbar and Kennedie records a contest between William Dunbar and Walter Kennedy in front of James IV which includes the earliest recorded use of the word shit as a personal insult 13 In 1536 the poet Sir David Lyndsay composed a ribald 60 line flyte to James V after the King demanded a response to a flyte Flytings appear in several of William Shakespeare s plays Margaret Galway analysed 13 comic flytings and several other ritual exchanges in the tragedies 14 Flytings also appear in Nicholas Udall s Ralph Roister Doister and John Still s Gammer Gurton s Needle from the same era While flyting died out in Scottish writing after the Middle Ages it continued for writers of Celtic background Robert Burns parodied flyting in his poem To a Louse and James Joyce s poem The Holy Office is a curse upon society by a bard 15 Joyce played with the traditional two character exchange by making one of the characters representing society as a whole Similar practices editHilary Mackie has detected in the Iliad a consistent differentiation between representations in Greek of Achaean and Trojan speech 16 where Achaeans repeatedly engage in public ritualized abuse Achaeans are proficient at blame while Trojans perform praise poetry 17 Taunting songs are present in the Inuit culture among many others Flyting can also be found in Arabic poetry in a popular form called naqa iḍ as well as the competitive verses of Japanese Haikai Echoes of the genre continue into modern poetry Hugh MacDiarmid s poem A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle for example has many passages of flyting in which the poet s opponent is in effect the rest of humanity Flyting is similar in both form and function to the modern practice of freestyle battles between rappers and the historic practice of the Dozens a verbal combat game representing a synthesis of flyting and its Early Modern English descendants with comparable African verbal combat games such as Ikocha Nkocha 18 In the Finnish epic Kalevala the hero Vainamoinen uses the similar practice of kilpalaulanta duel singing to defeat his opponent Joukahainen Modern portrayals editIn The Roaring Trumpet part of Harold Shea s introduction to the Norse gods is a flyting between Heimdall and Loki in which Heimdall says All insults are untrue I state facts The climactic scene in Rick Riordan s novel The Ship of the Dead consists of a flyting between the protagonist Magnus Chase and the Norse god Loki In the Monkey Island video game series insults are often integral to duels such as sword fighting and arm wrestling In Assassin s Creed Valhalla in which the protagonist is a Viking themself players can engage in flyting with various non playable characters for prestige and other rewards Some see the subculture of hip hop music known as Battle rap as a modern expression providing a platform for two individuals to poetically insult each other See also editBeot Craic Senna Slam poetry Dozens Maternal insult Battle rap Banter Pwnco a verse battle forming part of the Welsh custom of the Mari LwydNotes edit Nicht Bapst nicht schreck uns mit deim ban Und sey nicht so zorniger man Wir thun sonst ein gegen wehre Und zeigen dirs Bel vedere Edwards Jr Mark U 2004 11 19 Luther s Last Battles Politics and Polemics 1531 46 Fortress Press p 199 ISBN 978 1 4514 1398 4 Vivian Mercier 1962 The Irish Comic Tradition Oxford University Press p 146 Parks Ward 1986 Flyting Sounding Debate Three Verbal Contest Genres Poetics Today 7 3 439 458 doi 10 2307 1772505 JSTOR 1772505 Fliting Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Dictionaries of the Scots Language DOST flyting Retrieved 2023 12 18 Dunbar William 1979 23 The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie In Kinsley James ed The Poems of William Dunbar doi 10 1093 actrade 9780198118886 book 1 ISBN 978 0 19 811888 6 Retrieved 2023 12 18 via Oxford Scholarly Editions Online Flyting Scottish verbal contest Britannica Sayers William 1991 Serial Defamation in Two Medieval Tales The Icelandic Olkofra THattr and The Irish Scela Mucce Meic Datho PDF Oral Tradition pp 35 57 Retrieved 2016 03 16 Byock Jesse 1983 1982 Feud in the Icelandic Saga Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 08259 1 Clover Carol J 1980 The Germanic Context of the Unferth Episode Speculum 55 3 444 468 doi 10 2307 2847235 ISSN 0038 7134 JSTOR 2847235 S2CID 163023116 Quaestio selected proceedings of the Cambridge Colloquium in Anglo Saxon Norse and Celtic Volumes 2 3 pp 43 44 University of Cambridge 2001 ISBN missing a b Geoffrey Hughes M E Sharpe 2006 An encyclopedia of swearing the social history of oaths profanity foul language and ethnic slurs in the English speaking world M E Sharpe p 175 ISBN 9780765612311 OCLC 827752811 Galway Margaret 1935 Flyting in Shakspere s Comedies The Shakespeare Association Bulletin 10 4 183 191 ISSN 0270 8604 JSTOR 23684827 flyting Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of Literature Springfield MA Merriam Webster 1995 Literature Resource Center Mackie Hilary Susan 1996 Talking Trojan Speech and Community in the Iliad Lanham MD Rowmann amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8254 4 reviewed by Joshua T Katz in Language 74 2 1998 pp 408 09 Mackie 1996 83 Johnson Simon 2008 12 28 Rap music originated in medieval Scottish pubs claims American professor telegraph co uk Telegraph Media Group Retrieved 2008 12 30 Professor Ferenc Szasz argued that so called rap battles where two or more performers trade elaborate insults derive from the ancient Caledonian art of flyting According to the theory Scottish slave owners took the tradition with them to the United States where it was adopted and developed by slaves emerging many years later as rap see also John Dollard The Dozens the dialect of insult American Image 1 1939 pp 3 24 Roger D Abrahams Playing the dozens Journal of American Folklore 75 1962 pp 209 18 External links edit nbsp Media related to Flyting at Wikimedia Commons Flyting britannica com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flyting amp oldid 1192418196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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