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Beowulf

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Beowulf Many dimensions Heroic narrative Folklore Incorporates Creation hymn Gnomic verse Heroic beats Sources Oral Bible – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Beowulf


1
Beowulf
  • Many dimensions
  • Heroic narrative
  • Folklore
  • Incorporates
  • Creation hymn
  • Gnomic verse
  • Heroic beats
  • Sources
  • Oral
  • Bible

2
  • Problems
  • Old English takes some time to understand
  • Written in half lines not iambic pentameter
    (dominant verse pattern since 13th century)
  • ex-. Grendel gongan Gades yrr baer
  • God cursed Grendel Came greedily loping

3
  • Use of Apposition- a construction in which
    separate words have the same reference- creates
    synonyms and many of these words are hard to
    translate
  • Use of kennings and epithets create the same
    problem
  • Conjunctions rarely used so the syntax of
    sentence is lost

4
  • But, Anglo-Saxon audiences were able to
    understand how the poet manipulated conventions
    and it is wrong to assume that a society that
    appears primitive to ours is primitive in every
    way.

5
Apposition
  • Ealdre berafod bereft of life
  • Beabue gebaeded afflicted by aggression
  • Both connote evil
  • So dragons death was justified because its
    violence was evil
  • One rhetorical advantage of apposition is its
    open-endedness for the aggression in this case
    can be Grendels or Beowulfs

6
  • Today, the repetition of words and phrases with
    the same referent, even the kind of elegant
    variation once favored by so many Victorian
    writers is actively discouraged. A
  • A student paper that included passages like the
    killer, the terrible earth-dragon, deprived of
    life, afflicted by evil aggression would be
    savaged in red ink by Miss Briggs

7
Kennings
  • Sword remnants of hammers (homera lofe)
  • Since highly compressed it can be expanded to
    what remains after the blacksmiths hammers have
    finished their work sword.
  • Beowulfs name bee-wolf, where the wolf or foe
    of the bee is the honey-seeking bear
  • GodLord of life the Glorious Almighty

8
  • Manuscript of poem now in the British library in
    London
  • Over 60 translations of the poem
  • Poem is written in England but the events are set
    in Scandinavia

9
Basic Plot
  • Prince Beowulf (from Southern Sweden- Geats
    pronounced Ye-ats) comes to help Hrothgar, king
    in the land of the Danes rid the country of a
    terrible man- eating monster, Grendel. From this
    expedition, he returns in triumph and rules for
    50 years as king of his homeland. Beowulf must
    confront it. Grendels mother. He manages to slay
    the dragon but loses his own life in the battle.
    He enters the legends of his people as a warrior
    of great renown.

10
  • Scholars treated this poem as history and
    folklore (date?) until 1936 J.R.R. Tolkiens
    Beowulf The Monster and the Critics treated
    the poem as a work of literature.

11
  • Readers get caught between a shield wall of
    opaque references and a word-hoard that is old
    and strange, and feel a certain shock of new. In
    between is what W.B. Yeats calls a
    phantasmagoria.
  • Seamus Heaney

Poem as art-
12
The Exeter Book
  • Pages bound together between boards made of
    birch- from the German word for which we call the
    word book.
  • Given to the Exeter Cathedral in 975 by the first
    Bishop of Exeter, Leofric, who died in 1072.
    Probably was written by a single scribe.
  • Contains The Seafarer The Wanderer The
    Wifes Lament and Old English Riddles, among
    other poems

13
  • Survived because the Exeter Cathedral library
    resided in a building that escaped the dangers of
    the fire, civil war, and two world wars. Even so,
    it was ravaged by time.
  • Collected during the time of Alfred the Great-
    loved literature and learning.

14
The Seafarer
  • Believed to be written somewhere between
    450-1100.
  • Provides an accurate portrait of the sense of
    stoic endurance, suffering, loneliness, and
    spiritual yearning characteristic of Old English
    poetry
  • Divisible into two sections- elegaic and didactic

15
  • First Section
  • Painfully personal description of the suffering
    and mysterious attractions of life at sea
  • Second section
  • The speaker makes an abrupt shift to moral
    speculation about the fleeting nature of fame,
    fortune, and life itself, ending with an
    explicitly Christian view of God as wrathful and
    powerful.
  • The speaker urges the audience to forget earthly
    accomplishments and anticipate Gods judgment in
    the afterlife

16
  • The poem addresses both pagan and Christian ideas
    about overcoming this sense of suffering and
    loneliness
  • Pagan- being buried with treasure and winning in
    battle
  • Christian- Fearing Gods judgment
  • Allegory- life as a journey and the metaphor of
    life at sea

17
Welcome to the Sutton Hoo Room
Burial site of a 7th century Anglo-Saxon king,
found near Woodbridge, in Suffolk.
Sutton Hoo is an estate near Woodbridge, Suffolk,
England, that is the site of an early grave of an
Anglo-Saxon king. According to Encyclopedia
Britannica, "The burial, one of the richest
Germanic burials found in Europe, contained a
ship fully equipped for the afterlife (but with
no body) and threw light on the wealth and
contacts of early Anglo-Saxon kings its
discovery, in 1939, was unusual because ship
burial was rare in England" (Brtannica). In the
burial site there were 41 items of solid gold,
now held in the British Museum. The ship also
contained 37 coins, three unstruck coin blanks,
and two small ingots, all of gold. According to
the Voyage to the Other World, "The gold coins
and jewelry, the silver utensils, preserved in
the sand, of an exceptionally large ship, as well
as other valuable items, were intended to
accompany a powerful individual on his final
journey" (Schoenfeld 15). The Sutton Hoo ship
further displays both master craftsmanship and
major technical innovations such as a fixed
steering position and shorter and narrower planks
for more flexibility. Sutton Hoo played an
important role in the recording of Beowulf.
According to the Voyage to the other World,
"Beowulf and Sutton Hoo are related in the rather
simple way, that the description of Heorot in
Beowulfmay fit some early Anglo-Saxon buildings
for which evidence still survives elsewhere in
England" (Creed 67).
18
Priceless objects found in the Sutton Hoo burial
ship
Iron Helmet
Shield Mount
Anglo Saxon Necklace
Reconstructed Helmet
Boar Crest
Anglo Saxon Ring
19
  • Ubi Sunt- taken from a Latin phrase
  • Ubi sunt qui ante nos fuerunt meaning Where
    are those who were before us?
  • Common them in poems
  • Used as a motif in The Wanderer Beowulf
    Anglo-Saxon poetry expressed a considerable
    feeling of doom and sadness symptomatic of a
    ubi sunt yearning

20
  • May have come out of the fact that by conquering
    Roman Britain they were faced with massive stone
    works that seemed to come from lost era

21
  • The Wanderer specifically when it starts out -
    reminiscent of Tolkien from The Two Towers
  • Comitatus Germanic friendship structure that
    compelled kings to rule in consultation with
    their warriors
  • Bond existing between the lord and his warriors
    direct source of the practice of feudalism

22
  • Love according to the Romans and coming from
    them would have been
  • Country lord, general, etc
  • Friends platonic relationships
  • spouse

23
  • Had a profound effect on women. A man would leave
    his wife to be with his lord
  • Women were considered possessions
  • The Wifes Lament
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