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4.2.1: Loki (Norse)

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    279508
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    Loki, the adopted brother of Odin, represents a marginalized personality. Not quite a god–he is the son of Farbauti, a Frost Giant, and Laufey or Nal, a beautiful, tall, needle-sharp woman–he was raised amongst the Aesir and Vanir in Asgard where he regularly disrupts the peace with his mischievous, and occasionally deadly, pranks. His ability to shapeshift adds another layer to his complexity, as a character whose loyalties are constantly morphing and impossible to discern.

    A drawing of Loki tied to a slab, while his wife holds a cup under a serpent who drips venom into the cup
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): One of the more creative punishments Loki earned was to be chained to a rock–like Prometheus–while a serpent drips poison on his face. His wife, Signy, holds up a bowl to catch the poison, and when she must leave to empty it, the poison drips onto his face, causing him to shudder and the earth to shake. Thus the episode serves as an etiological explanation for earthquakes. (Johannes Gehrts, Public domain, via Wikimedia)

    Found primarily in Sturluson's Prose Edda (c. CE 1220, one of our main sources on Norse mythology), Loki’s notorious chicanery spans from the theft of Sif’s glorious hair, to the death of Baldr, the most beloved god in Asgard. To add further agitation to the lives of the gods and mortals, he fathers not one, but three monstrous children: the Midgard Wolf, the Midgard Serpent, and Hel, his daughter who oversees the realm of the dead. William Sayers attempts an explanation where Loki is seen as an inventive fixer who unlocks bogged-down situations with his dynamic words and actions, while another aspect of his character centers around him being the “blamer,” accusing and judging people around him. His harshness could be due to him being an outsider (his parents were probably giants), while maintaining his role as part of the divine family through his sworn brother Odin (Sayers qtd. in Groeneveld). Neil Gaiman, more concisely says, “Loki makes the world more interesting but less safe. He is the father of monsters, the author of woes, the sly god” (24).


    4.2.1: Loki (Norse) is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.