Dating Beowulf explores the difficulties and pleasures of intimacy with Beowulf â philological and speculative, playful and serious â 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. -- .
Dating Beowulf explores the difficulties and pleasures of intimacy with Beowulf â philological and speculative, playful and serious â 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. -- .Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
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
Inhaltsangabe
1 Getting intimate Daniel C. Remein and Erica Weaver Part I: Beowulf in public 2 Community, joy, and the intimacy of narrative in Beowulf Benjamin A. Saltzman 3 Beowulf and the intimacy of large parties Roberta Frank 4 Beowulf as Wayland's work: thinking, feeling, making James Paz Part II: Beowulf at home 5 Beowulf and babies Donna Beth Ellard 6 At home in the fens with the Grendelkin Christopher Abram Part III: Beowulf outside 7 Elemental intimacies: agency in the Finnsburg episode Mary Kate Hurley 8 What the raven told the eagle: animal language and the return of loss in Beowulf Mo Pareles Part IV: Beowulf's contact list 9 Men into monsters: troubling race, ethnicity, and masculinity in Beowulf Catalin Taranu 10 Sad men in Beowulf Robin Norris 11 Differing intimacies: Beowulf translations by Seamus Heaney and Thomas Meyer David Hadbawnik Part V: Beowulf in bed 12 Beowulf and Andreas: intimate relations Irina Dumitrescu 13 Beowulf, Bryher, and the Blitz: a queer history Peter Buchanan 14 Dating Wiglaf: emotional connections to the young hero in Beowulf Mary Dockray Miller Index
1 Getting intimate Daniel C. Remein and Erica Weaver Part I: Beowulf in public 2 Community, joy, and the intimacy of narrative in Beowulf Benjamin A. Saltzman 3 Beowulf and the intimacy of large parties Roberta Frank 4 Beowulf as Wayland's work: thinking, feeling, making James Paz Part II: Beowulf at home 5 Beowulf and babies Donna Beth Ellard 6 At home in the fens with the Grendelkin Christopher Abram Part III: Beowulf outside 7 Elemental intimacies: agency in the Finnsburg episode Mary Kate Hurley 8 What the raven told the eagle: animal language and the return of loss in Beowulf Mo Pareles Part IV: Beowulf's contact list 9 Men into monsters: troubling race, ethnicity, and masculinity in Beowulf Catalin Taranu 10 Sad men in Beowulf Robin Norris 11 Differing intimacies: Beowulf translations by Seamus Heaney and Thomas Meyer David Hadbawnik Part V: Beowulf in bed 12 Beowulf and Andreas: intimate relations Irina Dumitrescu 13 Beowulf, Bryher, and the Blitz: a queer history Peter Buchanan 14 Dating Wiglaf: emotional connections to the young hero in Beowulf Mary Dockray Miller Index
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