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Anglo Saxon Literature (449—1066)

Anglo Saxon Literature (449—1066). II. Anglo Saxon Literature. Introduction to British Literature 1. What literature is 2. Early Literature and the Epic. --characteristics of the epic. 3. The Personality of England. a. Timeline of British Literature and Thought

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Anglo Saxon Literature (449—1066)

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  1. Anglo Saxon Literature (449—1066)

  2. II. Anglo Saxon Literature • Introduction to British Literature 1. What literature is 2. Early Literature and the Epic --characteristics of the epic

  3. 3. The Personality of England a. Timeline of British Literature and Thought 449 1066 1492 1660 1790 1830 1914 1945 l____l_____l_____l___l___l___l___l___ Anglo- Medieval Rennais. Reason Rom. Victor. Mod. Anxiety Saxon

  4. b. Britain’s Island Personality • Strongly independent • Individual freedom— Anglo-Saxon heritage worth of the individual) • Strongly traditional – _____ system (medieval) mistrust of the _________ class ______ family into the 21st century

  5. B. Anglo Saxon Literature

  6. I. Anglo Saxon Literature (449—1066) • Introduction—Historical and Philosophical Background 1. Germanic invasions (Britons [Celts] conquered by Romans—Romans leave—Germanic barbarians invade a. Angles b. Saxons c. Jutes

  7. Germanic Invasions of the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes

  8. Anglo Saxon Literature • Primitive Heroic Ideal a. Ideal of Kingly behavior b. The Warrior ideals c. Goal—win enduring fame

  9. A. Intro to Anglo Saxon Literature • Christianity and Written Culture Arrive a. 597—Augustine (no, not that one) arrives in England and brings writing and a new morality --earlier Celts and Romans had been Christians • The Venerable Bede • Alfred, King of the West Saxons (871—899)

  10. A. Intro to Anglo Saxon Literature • Old English Poetry a. written literature in England begins in 7th century b. Before that—the scop

  11. A. Intro to Anglo Saxon Literature c. Mead, mead halls, and mead hall lifestyle

  12. A. Intro to Anglo Saxon Literature d. The Spirit of Old English Poetry 1. dark world; little _________; warrior life 2. style (no “romantic” poetry) 3. but—OE poetry had --extraordinary___________ --ironic __________________ --subtle and intense depiction of the nature or reality—no sentimentality—wyrd (____)

  13. A. Intro to Anglo Saxon Literature • Types of Anglo Saxon Literature a. heroic epic—long narrative whose main character is THE EPIC HERO --great bravery --super human ability --generosity

  14. A. Intro to Anglo Saxon Literature b. Elegiac lyrics—express thoughts and _________________ c. Riddles—guessing games --shows Anglo Saxon love of

  15. A. Intro to Anglo Saxon Literature • Style of Literature—A--S Literary Techniques alliteration kenning caesura rhythm

  16. B. Beowulf: the earliest epic poem in English

  17. B. Beowulf • Introduction a. Great epic poem of the Anglo Saxon age b. English writing about their Germanic forebears c. originally oral (scops) but written down later (early 700s) by a Christian (the “Beowulf poet”)

  18. B. Beowulf (introduction) • Beowulf is a profound mixture of two sets of values 1. Anglo Saxon _________ Ideal 2. Christian _______ and God

  19. 2. Meanings in Beowulf • Surface level b. Not just about feuds but about a deeper sense of evil—what does Beowulf say about evil? --the symbolism of the monster

  20. 2. Meanings in Beowulf (con’t.) C. What does Beowulf say about the Heroic Ideal? --bravery is the instrument by which the hero realizes himself --Hrothgar compared to Beowulf—shows what? --Beowulf meets his doom but not before he shows his ______________

  21. 2. Meanings in Beowulf • Philosophical level --what does Beowulf say about: fate (wyrd)? --sense of doom knowledge of death bravery and courage

  22. 2. Meanings in Beowulf • Psychological / archetypal level 1. The hero’s journey (the monomyth) 2. What does Beowulf say about being human?

  23. Setting and Characters • Herot— • Hrothgar— • Beowulf— • Grendel

  24. 3. Setting and Characters • Grendel’s mother— • Swamp-- • Dragon— • Wiglaf--

  25. 4. Symbolism in Beowulf • Psychological (swamp, Grendel, mother, dragon) • Social (Hrothgar, Beowulf, Herot) • Universal (G., G.’s mother, the dragon, the treasure, the tower

  26. 5. Conclusion The Anglo Saxon people, like all people, were much like us, dealing with— --a dangerous and seemingly uncaring world --what being human means --what living with bravery and honor means --battling the monsters that endanger us They were our grand—parents who lived in difficult times with pride and courage.

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