Introducing Grendel -- Chapter 1: The genealogy of Grendel -- Chapter 2: Scenes of Grendel Grendel Grendel -- Chapter 3: Themes of Grendel Grendel Grendel -- Chapter 4: Making of Grendel Grendel Grendel -- Chapter 5: Aesthetics of Grendel Grendel Grendel -- Chapter 6: Grendel'll get you -- Concluding Grendel.
A generous, energetic, engaging work... will be important to Beowulf study for years to come. THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW
Beowulf: Based on the Screenplay by Neil Gaiman & Roger Avary
The poem closes with an account of the funeral rites. Fantastic as these stories are, they are depicted against a background of what appears to be fact.
Written sometime between 700 and 1000AD, the anonymous 3000 line poem is sometimes called 'England's national epic' and recounts the story of a young Scandinavian warrior, Beowulf, who pledges to protect King Hrothgar's people from a ...
A simplified and illustrated retelling of the exploits of the Anglo-Saxon warrior, Beowulf, and how he came to defeat the monster Grendel, Grendel's mother, and a dragon that threatened the kingdom.
I would like to thank Toni Healey, Roberta Frank, Patrick Conner, George Clark, Timothy Boyd and especially David Townsend for their suggestions and encouragement. 1. A Beowulf Handbook, ed. Robert E. Bjork and John D. Niles (Lincoln: ...
... 'Going Berserk: Battle Trance and Ecstatic Holy Warriors in the European War Magic Tradition', International Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 35 (2016), 21–38 Wallach, Luitpold, Alcuin and Charlemagne: Studies in Carolingian ...
Bjork argues that speeches become increasingly indiscernible from the narrator's voice as the poem progresses.4 While this ... 'he stood on the hearth' (404), and then describes his skilfully wrought, shining battle dress (405b–6).
This collection of significant studies from the past 25 years of scholarship on Beowulf has been selected to represent the various approaches that have dominated Beowulf studies, and to illustrate the evolution of Old English literary ...
The translation of Beowulf by J.R.R. Tolkien was an early work, very distinctive in its mode, completed in 1926: he returned to it later to make hasty corrections, but seems never to have considered its publication.