List journal issues    
 
 
Home List journal issues Table of contents Subscribe to JEGP

Article

Volume 107 • Number 3

July 2008



 

 

The Historiographic Dimensions of Beowulf

 

by Andrew Scheil, University of Minnesota

The 3182 lines of Old English alliterative verse beginning Hw¾t we gardena in geardagum found in the British Library manuscript Cotton Vitellius A.xv have always been endowed with a curious relationship to history. On the one hand, "Beowulf" (as the long poem has been titled since Kemble's 1833 edition) resists continued scholarly attempts to place it securely in a historical context. Date, authorship, and provenance remain the subject of continued vigorous exploration and debate; as a result, the text has in many ways remained isolated from the detailed New Historicist approach to literary texts that has marked the dominant enterprise of literary criticism for the past twenty-five years. With all due caveats, Beowulf cannot be placed with full scholarly consensus in any more specific spatial or temporal context than "Anglo-Saxon England." Thus the forms of contextualization available in the disciplines of Early Modern studies or Romanticism or the American Renaissance have been unavailable, more or less, to criticism of the poem. We wish to write the poem into history, but that desire remains unfulfilled.

view PDF
 

 

 

 
Home | Issue Index
 
© 2008 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
Content in the Journal of English and Germanic Philology is intended for personal, noncommercial use only. You may not reproduce, publish, distribute, transmit, participate in the transfer or sale of, modify, create derivative works from, display, or in any way exploit the Journal of English and Germanic Philology database in whole or in part without the written permission of the copyright holder.


Terms and Conditions of Use