Book
Open Access
Dating Beowulf
Studies in intimacy
-
Edited by:
Daniel C. Remein
and Erica Weaver
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2020
About this book
Dating Beowulf explores the difficulties and pleasures of intimacy with Beowulf –philological and speculative, playful and serious – and how they organise themselves in an array of interrelated critical practices. Opening avenues for future work, it complicates urgent questions in the discourses of literary theory and Old English studies.
Author / Editor information
Daniel C. Remein is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts Boston
Erica Weaver is Assistant Professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles
Erica Weaver is Assistant Professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles
Reviews
'...the collection offers an opportunity to see the poem anew, from unexpected angles and in sometimes surprising contexts. At the same time, it models a kind of intellectual enterprise that welcomes new readers and encourages them to pay attention to where, how, and why they feel their own investments in the poem.'
Modern Philology
'a delight to read. The quality of its fourteen essays is uniformly high, evidence of careful and thoughtful work on the part of both authors and editors.'
Modern Philology
'One of the great delights of this book is how frequently contributors refer to other chapters and how many thematic clusters emerge. What really unites the collection is not a single definition of intimacy, but an attitude toward or orientation to the field of early medieval studies, one driven by a spirit of playfulness, openness, and accessibility. The fourteen essays sparkle with brilliant writing and a sense of shared joy in reading and writing about Beowulf.'
Arthuriana
Modern Philology
'a delight to read. The quality of its fourteen essays is uniformly high, evidence of careful and thoughtful work on the part of both authors and editors.'
Modern Philology
'One of the great delights of this book is how frequently contributors refer to other chapters and how many thematic clusters emerge. What really unites the collection is not a single definition of intimacy, but an attitude toward or orientation to the field of early medieval studies, one driven by a spirit of playfulness, openness, and accessibility. The fourteen essays sparkle with brilliant writing and a sense of shared joy in reading and writing about Beowulf.'
Arthuriana
Topics
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vii |
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xiv |
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Daniel C. Remein and Erica Weaver Open Access Download PDF |
1 |
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Benjamin A. Saltzman Open Access Download PDF |
31 |
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Roberta Frank Open Access Download PDF |
54 |
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Thinking, feeling, making James Paz Open Access Download PDF |
73 |
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Donna Beth Ellard Open Access Download PDF |
97 |
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Christopher Abram Open Access Download PDF |
120 |
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Part III: Beowulf outside
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Agency in the Finnsburg episode Mary Kate Hurley Open Access Download PDF |
147 |
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Animal language and the return of loss in Beowulf Mo Pareles Open Access Download PDF |
164 |
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Part IV: Beowulf’s contact list
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Troubling race, ethnicity, and masculinity in Beowulf Catalin Taranu Open Access Download PDF |
189 |
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Robin Norris Open Access Download PDF |
210 |
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Beowulf translations by Seamus Heaney and Thomas Meyer David Hadbawnik Open Access Download PDF |
227 |
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Intimate relations Irina Dumitrescu Open Access Download PDF |
257 |
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A queer history Peter Buchanan Open Access Download PDF |
279 |
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Emotional connections to the young hero in Beowulf Mary Dockray-Miller Open Access Download PDF |
304 |
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319 |
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 20, 2019
eBook ISBN:
9781526136442
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook ISBN:
9781526136442
Keywords for this book
Beowulf; intimacy; affect; feminist criticism; poetry; ecology; literary theory; medievalism; gender; queerness
Audience(s) for this book
General/trade;
Creative Commons
BY-NC-ND 4.0