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4 Writing for an Anglo-Saxon Audience in the Twentieth Century : J.R.R. Tolkien’s Old English Chronicles
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Maria Artamonova
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Contributors ix
- Foreword xi
- Acknowledgements xiii
- Abbreviations xiv
- Introduction 1
- 1 From Heorot to Hollywood : Beowulf in its Third Millennium 13
- 2 Priming the Poets : the Making of Henry Sweet’s Anglo-Saxon Reader 31
- 3 Owed to Both Sides : W.H. Auden’s Double Debt to the Literature of the North 51
- 4 Writing for an Anglo-Saxon Audience in the Twentieth Century : J.R.R. Tolkien’s Old English Chronicles 71
- 5 ‘Wounded men and wounded trees’ : David Jones and the Anglo-Saxon Culture Tangle 89
- 6 Basil Bunting, Briggflatts, Lindisfarne, and Anglo-Saxon Interlace 111
- 7 BOOM: Seeing Beowulf in Pictures and Print 129
- 8 Window in the Wall : Looking for Grand Opera in John Gardner’s Grendel 147
- 9 Re-placing Masculinity : The DC Comics Beowulf Series and its Context, 1975–6 165
- 10 P.D. James Reads Beowulf 183
- 11 Ban Welondes : Wayland Smith in Popular Culture 201
- 12 ‘Overlord of the M5’ : The Superlative Structure of Sovereignty in Geoffrey Hill’s Mercian Hymns 219
- 13 The Absent Anglo-Saxon Past in Ted Hughes’s Elmet 237
- 14 Resurrecting Saxon Things : Peter Reading, ‘species decline’, and Old English Poetry 255
- Index 279
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Contributors ix
- Foreword xi
- Acknowledgements xiii
- Abbreviations xiv
- Introduction 1
- 1 From Heorot to Hollywood : Beowulf in its Third Millennium 13
- 2 Priming the Poets : the Making of Henry Sweet’s Anglo-Saxon Reader 31
- 3 Owed to Both Sides : W.H. Auden’s Double Debt to the Literature of the North 51
- 4 Writing for an Anglo-Saxon Audience in the Twentieth Century : J.R.R. Tolkien’s Old English Chronicles 71
- 5 ‘Wounded men and wounded trees’ : David Jones and the Anglo-Saxon Culture Tangle 89
- 6 Basil Bunting, Briggflatts, Lindisfarne, and Anglo-Saxon Interlace 111
- 7 BOOM: Seeing Beowulf in Pictures and Print 129
- 8 Window in the Wall : Looking for Grand Opera in John Gardner’s Grendel 147
- 9 Re-placing Masculinity : The DC Comics Beowulf Series and its Context, 1975–6 165
- 10 P.D. James Reads Beowulf 183
- 11 Ban Welondes : Wayland Smith in Popular Culture 201
- 12 ‘Overlord of the M5’ : The Superlative Structure of Sovereignty in Geoffrey Hill’s Mercian Hymns 219
- 13 The Absent Anglo-Saxon Past in Ted Hughes’s Elmet 237
- 14 Resurrecting Saxon Things : Peter Reading, ‘species decline’, and Old English Poetry 255
- Index 279