Beowulf is the longest extant poem written in Old English or, as it is sometimes called, Anglo-Saxon. At 3,182 lines, Beowulf represents about 10 percent of the poetry that survives from the earliest stage of the English language, a period that lasted from about 600 to 1100 C.E. Some of the most basic facts we can know about any work of literature--who wrote it, and when, and where--elude us about Beowulf. Scholars have argued for generations about these matters, as is evident from some of the critical discussions included in this edition, but they have also agreed on the extraordinary qualities of the poem. For it is a remarkably vivid and powerful narrative of the hero Beowulf and the world he moves through as a slayer of monsters and ruler of his people.
This Norton Critical Edition presents the highly acclaimed Donaldson prose translation of Beowulf in its entirety, accompanied by explanatory annotations.
"Backgrounds and Contexts" provides readers with the historical, linguistic, and literary settings of Beowulf, including Robert C. Hughes on the origins of the Old English language, E. Talbot Donaldson's presentation of the major features of Old English poetry, new material on Beowulfs tribes and genealogies, three maps, and a facsimile illustration from the manuscript.
"Criticism" collects seven new and wide-ranging interpretations of Beowulf by Fred C. Robinson, Roberta Frank, John D. Niles, Michael Lapidge, Joyce Hill, Helen Bennett, and Nicholas Howe.
A Glossary of Proper Names and a Selected Bibliography are also included.
Preface
The Translation · E. Talbot Donaldson
Abbreviations
The Text of Beowulf
Backgrounds and Contexts
The Beowulf Manuscript
Tribes and Genealogies
The Geography of Beowulf
Robert C. Hughes · The Origins of Old English
to 800 A.D.
MAP: the continental homelands of the
Germanic invaders
MAP: the English kingdoms at the beginning of the
seventh century A.D.
E. Talbot Donaldson · [Old English Prosody and Caedmon's
Hymn]
Criticism
Fred C. Robinson · Appositive Style and the Theme
of Beowulf
Roberta Frank · The Beowulf Poet's Sense of History
John D. Niles · Reconceiving Beowulf'. Poetry as
Social Praxis
Michael Lapidge · Beowulf and the Psychology of Terror
Joyce Hill · "pat Was Geomum Ides!" A Female Stereotype
Examined
Helen Bennett * The Female Mourner at Beowulf's Funeral:
Filling in the Blanks/Heanng the Spaces
Nicholas Howe · The Uses of Uncertainty: On the Dating
of Beowulf
Glossary of Proper Names
Selected Bibliography