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Grendel, by John Gardner

Grendel, by John Gardner. Written in 1970, published in 1971 The Beowulf story from the point-of-view of the monster. Writing Style. Stream of consciousness Kenning : an Anglo-Saxon literary device that combines two words to give a third meaning, e.g. Whale-road for sea.

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Grendel, by John Gardner

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  1. Grendel, by John Gardner • Written in 1970, published in 1971 • The Beowulf story from the point-of-view of the monster

  2. Writing Style • Stream of consciousness • Kenning: an Anglo-Saxon literary device that combines two words to give a third meaning, e.g. Whale-road for sea. • Alliteration: a characteristic of Anglo-Saxon poetry

  3. People • Thane: a nobleman • Scop: a poet who sang or recited epic poems either from memory or by making up verses. The original composer of Beowulf was a scop. • Scribe: provides a written copy of a text. • The Shaper: Grendel’s name for a character who resembles the scop, but brings in the Christianity of the scribe

  4. 2. Taurus, the bull Meaningless cycles repeat endlessly and mechanically 3. Gemini, the twins 4. Cancer, the Crab 5. Leo, the lion The dragon tells Grendel “the truth” Bible stories define Grendel Solipsism: “I alone exist, nothing else.” Grendel is torn between dual visions of the world 1. Aries, the ram Grendel mocks the notion of heroism 6. Virgo, the virgin “Accident” vs. meaning 12. Pisces, the fish 7. Libra, the scales Wealtheow saves her people Beowulf arrives Anarchy, Machiavellian Religion Death: “We’re alone again. Abandoned.” 8. Scorpio, the scorpion 11. Aquarius, the water-carrier 10. Capricorn, the goat 9. Sagittarius, the archer

  5. Links to Beowulf • Style: kenning & alliteration • Characters, setting, plot • Songs the Shaper sings: • The prologue to Beowulf • Creation of the Earth • Cain and Abel

  6. Structure • 12 chapters • Each chapter covers one month in Grendel’s final year of life • Each chapter features one sign of the zodiac • The chapters bring us full circle from spring through the year, back to springtime, which offers both life and death

  7. Chapter 1 • Aries, the Ram, symbolizing lust and procreation – life • Grendel sees death everywhere • Everything is mechanical • The Ram’s springtime lust • Grendel’s springtime hatred • The seasons

  8. Chapter 2 • Taurus, the Bull • Another thing that operates “mechanically” • Grendel discovers solipsism: I alone exist • Grendel’s first encounter with men: pattern-makers

  9. Chapter 3 • Gemini, the twins • The development of dual visions of the world: • Grendel’s observations, which show men to be brutal and wasteful • The Shaper’s songs, which show men to be noble, and Hrothgar to be wise • Grendel is torn between these belief systems

  10. Chapter 4 • Cancer, the Crab • The Shaper sings Bible songs, which are also in Beowulf: • Creation of the Earth • Cain and Abel, which shows Grendel to be cursed • Grendel attempts to claim kinship with humans, and they try to kill him

  11. Chapter 5 • Leo, the Lion, king of beasts (the dragon) • Offers a rational, scientific vision of life • Everything is just matter (dust) • Dust forms patterns (sensitive dust, copulating dust) which are inevitably destroyed • Echo of the Biblical “Dust thou art, and dust to dust returneth.” • Defines Grendel’s role as the “brute existent”

  12. Chapter 6 • Virgo the Virgin • Unferth responds to the challenge of the brute existent by acting the part of the hero • Grendel mocks the idea of heroism: • by throwing apples (symbolic of a loss of innocence) at Unferth • By consistently sparing Unferth’s life

  13. Chapter 7 • Libra, the balance scales • Wealtheow demonstrates true nobility by giving herself to Hrothgar to save the lives of her people • Wealtheow has the power to forgive Unferth – but Grendel can never be forgiven • Grendel threatens and humiliates her, but lets her live

  14. Chapter 9 • Sagitarius, the Archer • Grendel tests the limits of religion • Ork and the young priest are true believers • Other priests care about: • Doctrine (it is written that…) • Appearances • $$$

  15. Chapter 10 • Capricorn, the Goat • The inexorable approach of death • The death of the Shaper (“We’re on our own again. Abandoned.”) • Loss of a sense of history – the past does not exist

  16. Chapter 11 • Aquarius, the water-carrier • Beowulf arrives • Grendel realizes that both he and Beowulf are mad

  17. Chapter 12 • Beowulf speaks the dragon’s words, but goes beyond what the dragon had said • Grendel rejects the idea that anything – art, heroism, beauty, nobility – has any significance • With his dying words, Grendel affirms the dragon’s vision and curses everyone to a life and death as meaningless as his own

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