Old English Poetry and Its Legacy

A special issue of Humanities (ISSN 2076-0787). This special issue belongs to the section "Literature in the Humanities".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2021) | Viewed by 30330

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Guest Editor
Department of English, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-1401, USA
Interests: old english poetry; old norse-icelandic; medical writing; modern swedish literature

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

I am writing to invite you to contribute to a collection of papers on “Old English Poetry and its Legacy.”

John D. Niles, Professor of Humanities Emeritus at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and Professor of English Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, has long been a major voice in Old English studies. This special issue of the international, peer-reviewed, open-access journal Humanities (https://www.mdpi.com/journal/humanities), together with a resultant book, will celebrate his achievements while promoting innovative work in the field.

The collection will focus on the legacy of Old English poetry broadly conceived and will include, for example, studies of particular poems, themes, or verse passages; of the translation or reception history of particular texts; of linguistic features of the poetry and their subsequent influence; of current historical and archaeological studies and how they illuminate the poetry or vice versa; of Old English poetry’s influence on various fields such as music or art; and of how an understanding of Old English prose or medieval Latin literature enriches appreciation of the poetry.

The submission deadline is 31 December 2021. Article processing charges for open access are explained at https://www.mdpi.com/apc; some subvention of costs may be available.

If you have other ideas for a paper that fits under the broad rubric “Old English Poetry and its Legacy,” please let me know. I hope that you will join me in honoring Professor Niles in a collection that will showcase leading research being done in Old English studies at the present time.

Yours,

Robert E. Bjork

Prof. Robert E. Bjork
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • Old English poetry
  • reception history
  • Old English meter
  • Old English style
  • translation studies

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Published Papers (8 papers)

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Research

32 pages, 6819 KiB  
Article
Rereading The Wife’s Lament with Dido of Carthage: The Husband and the Herheard
by Marijane Osborn
Humanities 2022, 11(3), 69; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11030069 - 30 May 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3508
Abstract
The Old English poem in The Exeter Book titled The Wife’s Lament is about longing and loneliness; the woman speaking in the poem longs for her absent husband who has sent her to live in a “cave under an oak tree”. The husband’s [...] Read more.
The Old English poem in The Exeter Book titled The Wife’s Lament is about longing and loneliness; the woman speaking in the poem longs for her absent husband who has sent her to live in a “cave under an oak tree”. The husband’s attitude toward his wife is a major point of controversy among commentators on the poem: has he sent her there as a punishment or for her protection? This essay argues that he loves her and seeks to protect her in his absence. The argument supporting this view addresses the following three topics: the reason he must leave and his brooding silence preceding that departure, the culture of warrior oaths, and the nature of the “cave” where the speaker is located. The first two discussions assess and reframe previous scholarship, while the discussion of the speaker’s location introduces a new area of research, the archaeology of early medieval rock-cut buildings. Finding that the poet might imagine the Wife inhabiting such a constructed building invites us to think about her, her husband, the poem, and even the Exeter Book itself within a new and interesting real-world context. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
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24 pages, 422 KiB  
Article
Tearas Feollon: Tears and Weeping in Old English Literature
by Hugh Magennis
Humanities 2022, 11(2), 54; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11020054 - 12 Apr 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3687
Abstract
This contribution surveys the range of images of weeping in Old English literature, concentrating particularly on weeping due to suffering, grief and unhappiness, and on tears of compunction, but examining other types of weeping as well, including supplicatory and sympathetic weeping (these latter [...] Read more.
This contribution surveys the range of images of weeping in Old English literature, concentrating particularly on weeping due to suffering, grief and unhappiness, and on tears of compunction, but examining other types of weeping as well, including supplicatory and sympathetic weeping (these latter are found in prose but not in poetry). Taking account of contemporary theory, the study understands weeping to be a physical manifestation of distress, but also to function as a social gesture, as reflected in the circumstance that most weeping in Old English is public rather than private. It is noted that saints do not normally weep in the literature despite the suffering they typically endure, and also that in traditional Old English poetry weeping is seen as not appropriate for men, or at least for men in the prime of life. Some of the most interesting instances of weeping in Old English, however, are to be found in episodes that appear to contradict or problematize such expectations, as is illustrated by the examination of a number of relevant examples. The references to weeping cited in this study are in the majority of cases based on Latin models, and reflect the wider Christian literary tradition in the early Middle Ages, rather than being specific to Anglo-Saxon England; but, in both religious and secular works, Old English writers are shown to be thoughtful and imaginative in their treatment of weeping and to deploy images of it to forceful emotive effect. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
14 pages, 771 KiB  
Article
The Manuscripts of Solomon and Saturn: CCCC 41, CCCC 422, BL Cotton Vitellius A.xv
by Tiffany Beechy
Humanities 2022, 11(2), 52; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11020052 - 7 Apr 2022
Viewed by 2510
Abstract
Reflecting John D. Niles’ recent codicological reading of the Exeter Book, this essay advances a comparative reading of the three manuscripts containing Old English Solomon and Saturn dialogues. These manuscripts attest that the Solomon and Saturn dialogues were “serious” texts, twice attending the [...] Read more.
Reflecting John D. Niles’ recent codicological reading of the Exeter Book, this essay advances a comparative reading of the three manuscripts containing Old English Solomon and Saturn dialogues. These manuscripts attest that the Solomon and Saturn dialogues were “serious” texts, twice attending the liturgy and later (12th century) joining high pre-scholastic philosophy. They further reveal a shift in the use of poetry over time. The earlier dialogues evince an “Incarnational poetics” that is distinct from but nevertheless comparable to the “monastic poetics” of the Exeter Book, while the later, prose dialogue has taken a less performative and more encyclopedic form. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
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22 pages, 461 KiB  
Article
Beowulf and the Hunt
by Francis Leneghan
Humanities 2022, 11(2), 36; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11020036 - 3 Mar 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 6372
Abstract
The presence of hunting imagery in Beowulf has often been noted, but the significance of the figures of the stag and the wolf to the thematic design of the poem has yet to be fully explored. In this article, I first analyse the [...] Read more.
The presence of hunting imagery in Beowulf has often been noted, but the significance of the figures of the stag and the wolf to the thematic design of the poem has yet to be fully explored. In this article, I first analyse the sustained presentation of the Danish royal hall as a stag, before exploring how the Beowulf poet exploited the various traditional associations of the wolf in the development of the figures of Grendel and Grendel’s mother. Finally, I consider the elaboration of the hunting imagery in the final section of the poem, which focuses on the Geatish Messenger’s account of the pursuit and killing of King Ongentheow by Eofor and Wulf, and the beasts-of-battle motif. The article concludes that the Beowulf poet made extensive use of animal and hunting imagery in order to ground his work in the lived experiences and fears of his audience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
11 pages, 257 KiB  
Article
Wyrd Poetics: Collapsing Timescapes and Untimely Desires in The Ruin
by Lisa M. C. Weston
Humanities 2022, 11(2), 35; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11020035 - 1 Mar 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3067
Abstract
John Niles suggests that Old English poems often “demand […] attention not only to the possible nuances of meaning of every word, but also to the spaces where no words are written and no story told”. Such spaces, he argues, invite readers into [...] Read more.
John Niles suggests that Old English poems often “demand […] attention not only to the possible nuances of meaning of every word, but also to the spaces where no words are written and no story told”. Such spaces, he argues, invite readers into a kind of intellectual “play” that constitutes, in fact, participation, even collaboration, in the creation of meaning. However, what of more literal spaces in texts, not perceptual gaps composed by a poet, but rather material gaps “crafted” by manuscript damage? What more radical, “veered” reading follows if we pay attention to the physical damage, neither to lament the loss nor to restore what might have been there once, but rather to collaborate with its void? The damage to the final folios of the Exeter Book manuscript means that we read a different poem from any “intact” or “original” text we may try to (re)create; we read something that not only responds to, but also reifies the material effects of time and wyrd, the powerful other-than-human force that plays so prominent a role in the poem. This essay seeks to unsettle the text by engaging with both the poem’s extant words and the silent spaces of wyrd’s traces “inscribed” upon the material manuscript. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
21 pages, 764 KiB  
Article
Old English Enigmatic Poems and Their Reception in Early Scholarship and Supernatural Fiction
by Patrick Joseph Murphy
Humanities 2022, 11(2), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11020034 - 28 Feb 2022
Viewed by 3507
Abstract
The scholarly reception history of the Old English riddles and adjacent “enigmatic poems” of the Exeter Book reveals a long process of creating intelligibility and order out of a complicated and obscure manuscript context. Understanding this history of reception allows us to see [...] Read more.
The scholarly reception history of the Old English riddles and adjacent “enigmatic poems” of the Exeter Book reveals a long process of creating intelligibility and order out of a complicated and obscure manuscript context. Understanding this history of reception allows us to see the influence of Old English poetry on modern creative medievalism, including the unexpected influence of medieval “enigmatic” poetry on the modern genre of supernatural fiction. Specifically, it is argued that the scholarly reception of folios 122v–123v of the Exeter Anthology was instrumental in inspiring one of the acknowledged classic ghost stories of the twentieth century, M.R. James’s “Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
9 pages, 225 KiB  
Article
Objects That Object, Subjects That Subvert: Agency in Exeter Book Riddle 5
by Jonathan Wilcox
Humanities 2022, 11(2), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/h11020033 - 25 Feb 2022
Viewed by 2853
Abstract
A sequence of Old English riddles from the Exeter Book allow an implement to speak. This article focuses on one example, Riddle 5, generally solved as either a shield or a cutting board, to show how each interpretation gives voice not just to [...] Read more.
A sequence of Old English riddles from the Exeter Book allow an implement to speak. This article focuses on one example, Riddle 5, generally solved as either a shield or a cutting board, to show how each interpretation gives voice not just to an inanimate object but also to a non-elite member of early medieval English society—either a foot-soldier or a kitchen hand. The two solutions come together because the two answers are captured in a single Old English word—“bord”—and also because the two interpretations resonate in parallel ways, creating sympathy for down-trodden members of society who rarely get so much attention in the surviving poetic record. This article argues that Old English riddles provide an enduring legacy of social critique crafted through humor. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
11 pages, 3333 KiB  
Article
An Unseen Eighth Rune: Runic Legacy and Multiliteral Performativity in Cynewulf’s The Fates of the Apostles
by Jacob Wayne Runner
Humanities 2021, 10(4), 124; https://doi.org/10.3390/h10040124 - 3 Dec 2021
Viewed by 2727
Abstract
The four Old English poems containing the runic Cyn(e)wulf ‘signature’ have continuously provoked debate as to the characters’ intratextual function and proper interpretation. While the prevailing view is that they are predominantly logogrammatic instantiations of traditional runic names, a case has nevertheless also [...] Read more.
The four Old English poems containing the runic Cyn(e)wulf ‘signature’ have continuously provoked debate as to the characters’ intratextual function and proper interpretation. While the prevailing view is that they are predominantly logogrammatic instantiations of traditional runic names, a case has nevertheless also been made for alternative words indicated by initialisms. Referencing both of these lines of reasoning in conjunction with a semiotic literary methodological stance, this article evaluates a single Cynewulf poem (The Fates of the Apostles) and its particular inclusion of runes amongst the bookhand alphabet characters. The assessment demonstrates the poem’s multiliteral destabilization of associative boundaries between different scripts, as well as between perceived boundaries of orality and legibility. In doing so, it identifies in the text an unseen ‘eighth rune’ that is semiotically operative. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Old English Poetry and Its Legacy)
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