Intro to Beowulf.ppt the best literature poetry

romyobeauty1 21 views 24 slides Sep 13, 2024
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About This Presentation

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Slide Content

Anglo-Saxon
and
Beowulf
Background

Background Information
•30,000 lines of Anglo-Saxon poetry survive
today
•3, 182 (10%) of the lines are from Beowulf
•Setting - Denmark and Sweden
•Author - Unknown, probably a monk
•Composed in the 7th or 8th century
•Oldest surviving English poem

Anglo-Saxon Culture
•Belief in fate (Wyrd)
•Accumulated treasures amount to success
•Fame and fortune zealously sought after
•Loyalty to one’s leader crucial
•Importance of pagan, Germanic, and
Christian ideals to people whose lives were
often hard and uncertain

Anglo-Saxon Culture
•Fierce, hardy life of warrior
and seamen
•Strength, courage, leadership
abilities appreciated
•Boisterous yet elaborately
ritualized customs of the
mead-hall
•Expected the hero to boast

Anglo-Saxon Ideals
Codes of Conduct
•Good defeats evil
•Wergild--restitution for murder or expect
revenge from victim’s relatives
•Boasts must be backed with actions.
•Fate is in control
•Fair fights are the only honorable fights

Epic Poem
•Long narrative poem that recounts the
adventures of a hero.
•Elevated language
•Does not sermonize
•Invokes a muse
•Begins in media res
•Mysterious origin, super powers,
vulnerability, rite of passage

The Epic Hero
•Actions consist of responses to catastrophic
situations in which the supernatural often
intervenes.
•Code of conduct forces him to challenge any threat
to society
•Destiny discovered through a series of episodes
punctuated by violent incidents interspersed with
idyllic descriptions.

Elements of Anglo-Saxon Poetry
•Chant-like effect of the four-beat line
•Alliteration (“Then the grim man in green gathers
his strength”)
•Caesura-pause or break in a line of poetry
(“Oft to the wanderer weary of exile”)
•Kenning-metaphorical phrase used instead of a
name (“battle-blade” and “ring-giver”)
•Epithet-description name to characterize
something (“keen-edge sword”)
•Hyperbole-exaggeration

Title of Epic Poem
•Anglo-Saxon word Beo
means “bright” or
“noble”
•Anglo-Saxon word
wulf means “wolf”
•Beowulf means bright
or noble wolf
•Other sources say Beo
means “bear”

How we date Beowulf
Some Important Dates:
521 A.D. – death of Hygelac, who is
mentioned in the poem
680 A.D. – appearance of alliterative verse
835 A.D. – the Danish started raiding other
areas; after this, few poets would
consider them heroes
SO: This version was likely composed between
680 and 835, though it may be set earlier

The Poetry in Beowulf
1. Alliterative verse
a.Repetition of initial sounds of words
(occurs in every line)
b. Generally, four feet/beats per line
c. A caesura, or pause, between
beats two and four
d. No rhyme

The Poetry in Beowulf
2. Kennings
a. Compound metaphor (usually two words)
b. Most were probably used over and over
For instance: hronade
literally means “whale-
road,” but can be
translated as “sea”

More Kennings
Other kennings from Beowulf:
“bone-house” = body
“gold-friend of men” = generous prince
“ring-giver” = lord
“flashing light” = sword

Setting: Beowulf’s time and place
Europe today Insert: Time of Beowulf

Some terms you’ll want to know
scop
A bard or story-teller.
The scop was responsible
for praising deeds of past
heroes, for recording
history, and for providing
entertainment

thane
A warrior
mead-hall
The large hall where the
lord and his warriors slept,
ate, held ceremonies, etc.
Terms: Thane and Mead-Hall

wyrd
Fate. This idea crops up a
lot in the poem, while at
the same time there are
Christian references to
God’s will.
Term: Wyrd

Main Characters

Beowulf
•Epic hero
•Geat (from southern
Sweden)
•Nephew of Higlac
(King at story’s start)
•Sails to Denmark to
help Hrothgar

Hrothgar
•Danish king
•Builds Herot (banquet
hall) for men
•Tormented by Grendel
for 12 years
•Loses many men to
Grendel
•Joyless before Beowulf
’s arrival

Grendel
•Referred to as demon
and fiend
•Haunts the moors
(swampy land)
•Descendant of Cain
•Feasts on 30 men the
night of 1st attack

Grendel’s Mother
•Referred to as she-
wolf
•Lives under a lake
•Challenges Hrothgar
when she kills one of
his best men

Fire Dragon
•Lives in Beowulf’s
kingdom
•Wakes up when thief
steals cup
•Guards countless
treasures

Works Cited
•Intro to Beowulf
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