Kendra Willson
Ph.D.
Old Norse; Modern Icelandic; sagas; runes; personal names; grammaticalization; historical syntax
Project: Invisible forces: communication with the supernatural in folk belief from Finland's bilingual coastal areas (Svenska kulturfonden, 2019-2021)
2018 Visiting professor, English department, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.
2015-2017 Collegium researcher, Turku Institute for Advanced Studies/Nordic languages, School of language and translation studies, University of Turku. Project: Finno-Ugric elements in runic inscriptions.
In general I am interested in questions that connect historical linguistics with a broader cultural context.
My current research project concerns Finland's relationship to Scandinavian runic culture, including possible Finnish and Sámi words in runic inscriptions, as well as use of and beliefs about runes in Finland over time.
I have worked extensively on Icelandic personal names. My dissertation discusses nickname formation and use in Old and Modern Icelandic. Collecting nicknames - unofficial names - led to an interest in name law: how it is decided which names can have official status.
I am also interested in aspects of saga style and narrative technique in Old Norse-Icelandic literature, continuity and change in Icelandic language, beliefs, and narrative practices, and the modern reception of the Old Norse literary heritage.
Another area of focus is historical syntax and grammaticalization; I have worked on examples from both Germanic and Finnic languages, including Icelandic word order, coordinating conjunctions attested in early runic inscriptions, and the Finnish TUA-converb (second temporal construction).
At the University of Turku, I have taught courses in English on Old Icelandic literature and mythology and an Old Norse reading course conducted in Finnish.
Other teaching experience includes Modern Icelandic and Swedish language instruction as well as courses in Modern Icelandic literature, Vikings, and Nordic folklore.
- Appeals to vulnerability in Icelandic personal name law discourse (2024) Vulnerability. Real, imagined and displayed fragility in language and society Willson, Kendra
- Authority crisis in Vörå (2024)
- Hiiskuttua: Turun yliopiston humanistisen tiedekunnan verkkolehtiGenealogy
- Contested narratives of the Vörå runestonesEru öll Blæ ánægð? Gender-bending Icelandic names (2024) Runes in Finland Willson Kendra
- Representation of Icelandic-Basque contacts in a Finnish novelFornaldarsögur (2024)
- Scandinavian Studies in Language
- Runes in Finland (2024) Willson Kendra
- Runes in Finland: The margins of Scandinavian runic culture (2024) Runes in Finland Willson, Kendra
- A 150-Year Debate over Surnames vs. Patronymics in Iceland2023
- (2023)
- Norna-Rapporter
- (2023) Routledge Resources Online - Medieval Studies Willson Kendra
- Austmarr network updates: genius loci and European connectionsAri Þorgilsson: Islantilaisten kirja (2022)
- RMN Newsletter
- Of Gunnhildrs and Gyðas (2022) Adam of Bremen’s Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum. Origins, reception and significance Willson Kendra
- Sturla Þórðarson (1214–84) (2022) Routledge Resources Online - Medieval Studies Willson Kendra
- The Missing Finnish Runestones (2022) Medievalism in Finland and Russia: Twentieth- and Twenty-First Century Aspects Willson Kendra
- Saksankieliset kielimaisemat (2021)
- Hiiskuttua: Turun yliopiston humanistisen tiedekunnan verkkolehti
- Seiðr and (Sámi) shamanism: definitions, sources, and identities. (2021) Folklore and Old Norse mythology Willson Kendra
- (2020)
- Mirator
- A saga king in a Finnish Beijing opera (2020) The Vikings reimagined. Reception, recovery, engagement Kendra Willson
- Kontaktit ja verkostot Itämeren alueella (2020)
- Hiiskuttua: Turun yliopiston humanistisen tiedekunnan verkkolehti
- Ahti on the Nydam strap-ring : on the possibility of Finnic elements in runic inscriptions (2019) Contacts and networks in the Baltic Sea region Willson K
- Conference report : Austmarr VI: Religion, language, practice, with a workshop on Late Iron Age mortuary behaviours : 5th-6th December 2016, Helsinki, Finland (2019)
- RMN Newsletter