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Beowulf at Kalamazoo
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This is a collection of essays designed to capitalize on the success of Seamus Heaney' prize-winning translation of Beowulf, which bridges the gap between the ivory tower where most who study Beowu...
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01 January 2012

This is a collection of essays designed to capitalize on the success of Seamus Heaney' prize-winning translation of Beowulf, which bridges the gap between the ivory tower where most who study Beowulf reside and lay readers drawn to the poem because of Heaney's reputation, the review in the New York Times Book Review, the Whitbread Prize for poetry, and even perhaps the attractive and eye-catching cover. The book is conceived in three parts. The first section explores translations into modern English and languages other than English; the second explores issues of oral theory and performance; the third offers a wide selection of reviews of Heaney's Beowulf written by Anglo-Saxonists. A DVD of readings of the first fifty-two lines of Beowulf in Old English, Czech, Spanish, Icelandic, Hungarian, and Italian, and selections from Turkish and Asian epics accompanies the volume. "Beowulf" at Kalamazoo should be of interest to Anglo-Saxonists, translation theorists, linguists, oral and performance theorists, and anyone anywhere in an English department who teaches Beowulf in translation.
Price: £22.00
Pages: 443
Publisher: Medieval Institute Publications
Imprint: Medieval Institute Publications
Series: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Culture
Publication Date:
01 January 2012
ISBN: 9781580441520
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical, Literary studies: poetry and poets, LITERARY CRITICISM / Medieval, LITERARY CRITICISM / Poetry, Folklore studies / Study of myth (mythology), Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
Introduction Part 1. Essays on Translation The Languages of Beowulf between Klaeber and Heaney by Daniel Donoghue Who's Afraid of Translating Beowulf? by Nicholas Howe Iron and Irony in Beowulf by R. M. Liuzza Monstrous Introductions: Ellengaest and Aglaecwif by Jana K. Schulman Sweet's Prose Beowulf by Paul E. Szarmach Behemas þ
a Hildlatan: Beowulf and Its First Translation into Czech by Jan Cermak Beowulf in Spanish by Maria Jose Gomez-Calderon Beowulf in Hungarian by Katalin Halacsy Scholz Italian Translations of Beowulf by Claudia Di Sciacca and Loredana Teresi The Intimacy of Bjolfskvið
a by Petur Knutsson Part 2. Essays on Performance Performance I: Beowulf (A Roundtable Discussion) by Mark Amodio, Benjamin Bagby, Karl Reichl, and John Miles Foley Why Performance Matters by John Miles Foley "Swutol sang scopes": Field Notes on the Performance of Beowulf by Karl Reichl Part 3. Reviews of Heaney's Beowulf By Michael Alexander, S. A. J. Bradley, Graham Caie, Jan Cermak, Howell Chickering, Daniel Donoghue, Randi Eldevik, Loren C. Grube, Nicholas Howe, Heather O'Donoghue, Tom Shippey, E. G. Stanley, G. Storms, Julian Wasserman, Hideki Watanabe, Gernot Wieland, and Jonathan Wilcox
a Hildlatan: Beowulf and Its First Translation into Czech by Jan Cermak Beowulf in Spanish by Maria Jose Gomez-Calderon Beowulf in Hungarian by Katalin Halacsy Scholz Italian Translations of Beowulf by Claudia Di Sciacca and Loredana Teresi The Intimacy of Bjolfskvið
a by Petur Knutsson Part 2. Essays on Performance Performance I: Beowulf (A Roundtable Discussion) by Mark Amodio, Benjamin Bagby, Karl Reichl, and John Miles Foley Why Performance Matters by John Miles Foley "Swutol sang scopes": Field Notes on the Performance of Beowulf by Karl Reichl Part 3. Reviews of Heaney's Beowulf By Michael Alexander, S. A. J. Bradley, Graham Caie, Jan Cermak, Howell Chickering, Daniel Donoghue, Randi Eldevik, Loren C. Grube, Nicholas Howe, Heather O'Donoghue, Tom Shippey, E. G. Stanley, G. Storms, Julian Wasserman, Hideki Watanabe, Gernot Wieland, and Jonathan Wilcox