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"Beowulf" and Beyond

English · Paperback / Softback

Description

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Beowulf and Beyond is a collection of papers mainly on Medieval English (i.e. Old and Middle English) language, literature and culture, often using comparative and interdisciplinary approaches. It features major authors and texts such as Beowulf, Chaucer, the Wyclif Bible, Margery Kempe, and Malory, but also the poem Judgement Day II, the Épinal-Erfurt glossary (ca. 680), and the Assize of bread (1256), a legal document. The more linguistically oriented studies deal with the language of Old English and Old Norse runic inscriptions, with OE word-formation (verbs with prefixed adverbs such as oferfaran; words for people), the loss of final plosive consonants in late Middle English rhyme-words, the use of hyphens in ME, and a comparison between Medieval English and German. Some contributions are specifically concerned with teaching Medieval texts to today's students (Beowulf, Malory). The volume is also a document of the activities of IAUPE, the International Association of University Professors of English. It contains a selection of the papers that were originally presented at the IAUPE Medieval Symposia at Munich/Germany and Vancouver/Canada.

List of contents

Contents: Hans Sauer: Introduction - Manfred Malzahn/Muhammad Abu al-Fadl Badran: Beowulf in Arabia: Teaching heroic poetry in a post-heroic age - Patrizia Lendinara: Translating Doomsday: De die iudicii and its Old English translation (Judgement Day II) - Alfred Bammesberger: Old English runic inscriptions: Textual criticism and historical grammar - Ian Kirby: The Narragansett runic inscription, Rhode Island - Michiko Ogura: Old English preverbal elements with adverbial counterparts - Hans Sauer: Old English words for people in the Épinal-Erfurt glossary - Claire Fennell: The assize of bread (1256) - Conrad Lindberg: Revising the Wyclif Bible - Michael W. Twomey: Chaucer's Latinity - Saburo Oka: Chaucer's Troilus in a new comparative context - Liliana Sikorska: Between penance and purgatory: Margery Kempe's Pélerinage de la vie humaine and the idea of salvaging journeys - Carol Kaske: Malory's critique of violence before and just after the oath of the Round Table - Saara Nevanlinna: Observations on the loss of final plosive consonants in late Middle English rhyme-words - Manfred Markus: Hyphens and hyper-hyphens in Middle English (corpus-based) - Horst Weinstock: Medieval English and German: A guide to modern similarities and dissimilarities.

About the author










The Editors: Hans Sauer is professor of English Language and Medieval English Literature at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich and teaches at the Department of English and American Studies. He has edited a number of Old and Middle English texts and published on wordformation, plant names, translations of Beowulf etc. He is also a co-editor of the Lexikon des Mittelalters, Anglia, and Middle English Texts.
Renate Bauer teaches at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich at the Department of English and American Studies and is a lecturer in the field of English Language and Medieval English Literature. She has written a book on the depiction of Jews in Old and Middle English texts.


Product details

Assisted by Renate Bauer (Editor), Hans Sauer (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.07.2016
 
EAN 9783631559253
ISBN 978-3-631-55925-3
No. of pages 338
Dimensions 148 mm x 19 mm x 210 mm
Weight 460 g
Series Studies in English Medieval Language and Literature
Studies in English Medieval Language and Literature
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > English linguistics / literary studies

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