1 / 13

Beowulf : The Beginnings of British (English) Literature

Beowulf : The Beginnings of British (English) Literature. Power point adapted from : http://literature.pppst.com/ABC/beowulf.html Edited by K. Conner. Old English. Beowulf was written in Old English, an early form of English

kale
Télécharger la présentation

Beowulf : The Beginnings of British (English) Literature

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Beowulf:The Beginnings of British (English) Literature Power point adapted from : http://literature.pppst.com/ABC/beowulf.html Edited by K. Conner

  2. Old English • Beowulf was written in Old English, an early form of English • In 1066, William the Conqueror successfully invaded England, bringing his Norman French language with him; the nobility began to speak French, and gradually Old English evolved into Middle English (1100-1500): “Whan that Aprill, with his shouressoote/The droghte of March hath perced to the roote” • Modern English has been spoken since the Renaissance – Shakespeare is NOT Old English; he is Early Modern English

  3. Origins Unknown author; possibly one Christian author in Anglo-Saxon England Unknown date of composition (roughly 8th-11thCentury)

  4. Literary Devices • Anglo- Saxons didn’t read or write, so they had to memorize their stories. So, they used a lot of poetic devices to help. • Allusion: Biblical, legend, historical • Alliteration (eg. Scyld’s strong son)

  5. Literary Devices • Epic poetry: a long narrative poem written in elevated style which celebrates the deeds of a legendary hero or god. • Kenning: two-word metaphorical name for something (eg. whale-road=sea) • Scop: Anglo-Saxon composers and storytellers

  6. Warrior Code • As you have seen, the A-S people lived a difficult, dark life. Since fighting was a common element, they had a warrior code • Comitatus: Germanic code of loyalty • Thane: warrior – swears loyalty to the king for whom they fought and whom they protected • Kings: generous, protected thanes

  7. Warrior Code • Reputation: thanes were expected to be loyal, brave, courageous; kings were expected to be generous and hospitable • Wergild: “man-payment”; a fee paid to the family of a slain man to atone for his murder and to prevent the family from seeking revenge. • This gives us a good view of the A-S ideal

  8. Geats and Danes • Beowulf was a war leader of the Geats, a group of people in what is now southern Sweden • Hrothgar was king of the Danes

  9. Elements of an Epic • Epic hero– an character with a trait or characteristic that is valued by his society. • (E.g.– Superman’s bravery or valor) • Quest– A journey through which the character or the reader learns something of value • Valorous Deeds– Doing something bravely. • Divine Intervention– The hand of God (or gods) help the hero, proving his value. • Great events– The hero has a hand in something important in the history or mythology of a culture.

  10. 3 Epic Conventions • Invoke a muse • Muse– inspiration provided by the gods • Plot begins in medias res • In medias red– “In the middle of” the action • Serious tone • Not necessary to have all on these, but need most at least

  11. Possible OER • Evaluate a story you’ve read or seen as an epic story. • O! Brother, Where Art Thou? • Epic hero– Ulysses Everett McGill • Quest– To seek the treasure • Valorous deeds– Singing the song, escaping the sheriff, saving Tommy from the KKK, et al. • Divine intervention– the flood • Great events– Helping elect Pappy O’Daniel as governor of Mississippi instead of the KKK head dragon • Literary epic– Cohen brothers wrote it in 2001 • Invokes a muse at the beginning • Begins in the middle of the story as they escape jail • Serious tone? Notsomuch.

  12. Beowulf’s Name • Beowulf’s father– Edgetho • In most cases, the son is named after the father • Don • Donald (son of Don) • McDonald (son of son of Don) • McDonaldson (son of son of son of Don) • Proves Beowulf is own individual with own powers and abilities (and more important than his father) • Beo– Bear • Bears are known as Great Protectors in Norse mythology • Strong • Wulf– Wolf • Wolves are also great protectors, but are also cunning and speedy

More Related