I'm tired of the Viking pop culture trend erasing warrior women

More like NorthWOMAN, amiright??? Shieldmaiden representation matters!
By Jess Joho  on 
A Valkyrie female viking warrior screeches into battle in Robert Eggers "The Northman"
Viking warrior women were more than just a myth. Credit: Focus Features

Welcome to Fix It, our series examining film and TV projects we love — save for one tiny change we wish we could make.


This post contains spoilers for The Northman

There's a background character in The Northman you probably blinked and missed. But her appearance, however brief, electrified me more than any other thrill in director Robert Eggers' bombastic new Viking epic (and that's saying something).

Amleth (who embodies the traditional hypermasculine Viking warrior ideal that dominates today's modern reimaginings of this ancient history) is partaking in the spoils of a violent raid on an innocent village. Then an armor-clad woman on horseback storms into the shot. Bearing all the visual markers of a military leader, she rallies the conquered villagers, waving a flag and calling upon strong warriors of any background to join her fight — before riding off, never to be seen in the movie again.

But I spent the rest of its runtime longing for the movie that could've been, if only she had been its main character instead.

Don't get me wrong: I love what The Northman does with Alexander Skarsgård as its lead. But let's be honest, by far the most underwhelming part of Egger's enthrallingly refreshing film is its tired old Revenge-For-My-Daddy-King storyline that's been shoved down our throats countless times before, by everything from Hamlet to The Lion King

Yet I digress. Because as a dork for this era of prehistory, I'm especially a fan of Eggers' entry into the recent pop culture trend putting Vikings in major TV shows, films, and video games. From History Channel's surprisingly great Vikings series to Netflix's more recent Norsemen and Vikings: Valhalla shows, Marvel's box office-breaking Thor movies (particularly Ragnarok), and the excellent 2018 reboot of God of War, I'm living for this ancient Nordic moment in the mainstream.

But I'm also sick of each one making the same exact mistake by sidelining the best part of real-world Viking history: the absolute badassery of their warrior women (AKA shieldmaidens).

The fact, fiction, myth, and misogyny behind shieldmaidens  

Now, to his credit, Eggers is a stickler for historical accuracy in his movies. 

That's why the nameless female military leader in The Northman is a deliberate acknowledgment of recent archaeological evidence suggesting that Viking warrior women really did exist, which experts previously doubted. According to interviews, the movie character is loosely based on the famous grave of a high-ranking Viking military leader (identified as Bj 581) long-assumed to be male — until DNA evidence published in 2017 definitively proved she was female

In The Northman, Amleth's prophesied demise (delivered by none other than Björk) along with his "King's tree" vision implies that his downfall is only the first chapter in his daughter's larger story, as she fulfills her destiny of becoming a great Viking Queen. We'll count that as yet another nod to actual archeological evidence that leadership roles in the Viking Age were far more gender-fluid than previously thought.

Mashable Top Stories
Stay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.
Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletter
By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up!

But for the love of all that is Freya, why is all this Viking warrior woman badassery still kept so squarely in the background of The Northman?

Just about every other pop culture story set in the Viking Age is guilty of the same oversight. God of War and Thor certainly include the strong mythological female characters central to Norse lore, like the Valkyries and goddess Freya. The Vikings TV show brings that representation a step closer to home by depicting real-world Viking women battling alongside men. But only 2020's Assassin's Creed: Valhalla video game gives players the option to play as a Viking female protagonist. Even then, though, getting the option to play as a woman is not the same as getting a story specifically grounded in the perspective of a Viking shieldmaiden.

Why is all this Viking warrior woman badassery still kept so squarely in the background of 'The Northman'?

In all fairness, though, we can't blame the sidelining of warlike Viking women exclusively on The Northman and its ilk. Until quite recently, women's importance in Viking society was sidelined by history itself too.

History, particularly prehistory pieced together through thousand-year-old archeological finds, isn't as hard of a science as we want it to be. Built on a foundation of facts that rely heavily on the subjective interpretation of artifacts, it's colored by the biases of our modern, male-dominated society. The impact those biases can have on our understanding of gender dynamics in the Viking Age became very clear in the reaction to the 2017 DNA analysis study of the so-called Birka female Viking warrior's grave

Anya Taylor-Joy and Alexander Skarsgard share a kiss in "The Northman"
I love a witchy Anya Taylor-Joy, but this representation is missing a war hammer. Credit: Focus Features

After the skeleton was confirmed to be female, some archeologists jumped to the conclusion that the grave must've never belonged to a military leader in the first place, then, despite containing ample qualifying artifacts. But debate over the Birka female Viking warrior grave only deepened an existing divide within the archeological community over Viking women's role in the social hierarchy.

Many experts still negate the mounting evidence of women being present for the hostile Viking invasions, and discoveries of even more female warrior graves, along with the historical accounts of Viking women joining in warfare — insisting that the statues and depictions of battle-ready Viking women are only symbolic rather than indicative of real-world shieldmaidens. Each side of this debate accuses the other of modern biases, implying that either sexism or feminism clouds the other's objectivity. 

The women written out of the Viking pop culture trend

We don't yet have conclusive answers on how pervasive shieldmaidens were in the Viking Age. But their absence from The Northman, aside from the few seconds afforded to the one proven incontrovertibly real, tells us a lot about which narratives we're inclined to believe today, even in a film full of magic. 

I'm all for Robert Eggers' near obsessive fixation on grounding his films in real-world facts as much as possible. But exactly which version of history is he giving more weight to — and whose perspective do those versions leave out? 

Much like movies, history is a story we tell ourselves to make sense of the world. And frankly, I'm just tired of the Viking Age being used exclusively as a setting to justify depictions of unfettered hypermasculinity, to exercise the same old male-centric anxieties about patriarchy, through the same cookie-cutter male hero archetype, in the same story told over and over and over again. 

Frankly, I'm just tired of the Viking Age being used exclusively as a setting to justify depictions of unfettered hypermasculinity.

This isn't really a feminist call-out. It's a declaration of utter boredom — a plea for pop culture's Vikings to try on literally anything other than muddy blood-soaked men, if only for the change of pace. Out of anyone, I thought that maybe the director of The Witch would've known how invigorating it can be to immerse modern audiences in the perspective of women who were too often written out of their own histories.

But perhaps Eggers chose to sideline shieldmaidens in The Northman as a franchise play, to hype up The Northwoman, if you will (god, please don't let this become an actual reality). Most likely, though, it's just the same lack of imagination that turned real Viking women into a myth.

Topics Film Gender

Mashable Image
Jess Joho

Jess is an LA-based culture critic who covers intimacy in the digital age, from sex and relationship to weed and all media (tv, games, film, the web). Previously associate editor at Kill Screen, you can also find her words on Vice, The Atlantic, Rolling Stone, Vox, and others. She is a Brazilian-Swiss American immigrant with a love for all things weird and magical.


More from Fix It


'The Bear' can't wait any longer for Carmy to evolve
Chef Carmy stands with his head against the walk-in refrigerator



Recommended For You
Flirting IRL is having a major pop culture moment
A composite showing Amelia Dimoldenberg, Andrew Garfield, Charli XCX, Rivals stars Alex Hassell and Bella Maclean, Nobody Wants This stars Adam Brody and

Unwrap a new Funko Pop! every day with these discounted advent calendars
Funko pop asvent calendar collage against a red background


The 'Gen Z marketing script' trend is not giving
Three examples of the trend: The Jane Austen Centre, Fyfield Manor, and Northumberland Zoo.

Set the mood this season with an Echo Pop and smart bulb for 58% off
Echo Pop with Sengled Smart Bulb on blue and white abstract background

More in Entertainment
How to watch Australia vs. India 2nd Test online for free
Virat Kohli of India celebrates scoring a century

How to watch New Zealand vs. England 2nd Test online for free
England's Brydon Carse celebrates

How to watch the 2024 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix online for free
Sergio Perez of Mexico driving the Oracle Red Bull Racing

Amazon is giving two free Kindle books to Prime members in December
three book covers on a dark blue and purple background

How to watch Packers vs. Lions online for free
By Trisha Easto
Jordan Love of the Green Bay Packers

Trending on Mashable
NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for December 6, 2024
A phone displaying the New York Times game 'Connections.'

Wordle today: Answer, hints for December 6
a phone displaying Wordle

Tesla suspends Cybertruck production. Who could have predicted this?
Tesla vehicles, including Cybertrucks, loaded on a transport that seems to be going nowhere.

NYT Mini crossword answers, hints for December 6, 2024
Closeup view of crossword puzzle clues

At 2 a.m., an unexpected event led to a surprise planet discovery
A NASA conception of what the exoplanet Kepler-51e might look like.
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!