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Chapter 10. Darkness Edible: Soul, Body, and Worms in Early Medieval English Devotional Literature
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Haruko Momma
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface vii
- Introduction: Darkness in the Universe, Darkness in the Mind in Anglo-Saxon Literature 1
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Part 1: Darkness
- Chapter 1. Sweart as Sin: Color Connotation and Morality in Anglo-Saxon England 15
- Chapter 2. “The Night is Dark and Full of Terrors”: Darkness, Terror, and Perception in Anglo-Saxon England 37
- Chapter 3.The Sinister Sound of Shadows in the Old English Poetics of the Dark 61
- Chapter 4. Into the Darkness First: Neoplatonism and Neurosis in Old English Wisdom Poetry 93
- Chapter 5. Signs, Interpretation, and Exclusion in Beowulf 117
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Part 2: Depression
- Chapter 6. Beowulf’s Dark Thoughts: Heremod, Hrethel, and Exempla of the Mind 135
- Chapter 7. The Fourth Fate of Men: Heremod’s Darkened Mind 155
- Chapter 8. Eating People and Feeling Sorry: Cannibalism, Contrition, and the Didactic Donestre in the Old English Wonders of the East and Latin Mirabilia 167
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Part 3: Descent
- Chapter 9. Darkness and Light in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Junius 11 209
- Chapter 10. Darkness Edible: Soul, Body, and Worms in Early Medieval English Devotional Literature 237
- Chapter 11. “Stand Firm”: The Descent to Hell in Felix’s Life of Saint Guthlac 255
- Chapter 12. The Heart of Darkness: Descent, Landscape, and Mental Projection in Christ and Satan and The Wife’s Lament 277
- Notes on Contributors 299
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface vii
- Introduction: Darkness in the Universe, Darkness in the Mind in Anglo-Saxon Literature 1
-
Part 1: Darkness
- Chapter 1. Sweart as Sin: Color Connotation and Morality in Anglo-Saxon England 15
- Chapter 2. “The Night is Dark and Full of Terrors”: Darkness, Terror, and Perception in Anglo-Saxon England 37
- Chapter 3.The Sinister Sound of Shadows in the Old English Poetics of the Dark 61
- Chapter 4. Into the Darkness First: Neoplatonism and Neurosis in Old English Wisdom Poetry 93
- Chapter 5. Signs, Interpretation, and Exclusion in Beowulf 117
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Part 2: Depression
- Chapter 6. Beowulf’s Dark Thoughts: Heremod, Hrethel, and Exempla of the Mind 135
- Chapter 7. The Fourth Fate of Men: Heremod’s Darkened Mind 155
- Chapter 8. Eating People and Feeling Sorry: Cannibalism, Contrition, and the Didactic Donestre in the Old English Wonders of the East and Latin Mirabilia 167
-
Part 3: Descent
- Chapter 9. Darkness and Light in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Junius 11 209
- Chapter 10. Darkness Edible: Soul, Body, and Worms in Early Medieval English Devotional Literature 237
- Chapter 11. “Stand Firm”: The Descent to Hell in Felix’s Life of Saint Guthlac 255
- Chapter 12. The Heart of Darkness: Descent, Landscape, and Mental Projection in Christ and Satan and The Wife’s Lament 277
- Notes on Contributors 299