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Beowulf / Translated by Stephen Mitchell.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Reader in ClassicsPublication details: New Haven, CT Yale University Press 2017Description: 224 pages. : ill 21 cmISBN:
  • 9780300228885
  • 0300228880
Uniform titles:
  • Beowulf.
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 829/.3 23
LOC classification:
  • PR1583
Other classification:
  • HH 1560
  • HH 1561
Online resources:
Contents:
A note on pronunciation
Map: the geography of Beowulf
Subject: A widely celebrated translator’s vivid, accessible, and elegantly concise rendering of an ancient English masterpiece. Beowulf tells the story of a Scandinavian hero who defeats three evil creatures—a huge, cannibalistic ogre named Grendel, Grendel’s monstrous mother, and a dragon—and then dies, mortally wounded during his last encounter. If the definition of a superhero is “someone who uses his special powers to fight evil,” then Beowulf is our first English superhero story, and arguably our best. It is also a deeply pious poem, so bold in its reverence for a virtuous pagan past that it teeters on the edge of heresy. From beginning to end, we feel we are in the hands of a master storyteller. Stephen Mitchell’s marvelously clear and vivid rendering re-creates the robust masculine music of the original. It both hews closely to the meaning of the Old English and captures its wild energy and vitality, not just as a deep “work of literature” but also as a rousing entertainment that can still stir our feelings and rivet our attention today, after more than a thousand years. This new translation—spare, sinuous, vigorous in its narration, and translucent in its poetry—makes a masterpiece accessible to everyone.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Fiction Fiction Waimate Event Centre - Long term storage Fiction MITC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan Not for loan A00671561

A note on pronunciation

Map: the geography of Beowulf

A widely celebrated translator’s vivid, accessible, and elegantly concise rendering of an ancient English masterpiece. Beowulf tells the story of a Scandinavian hero who defeats three evil creatures—a huge, cannibalistic ogre named Grendel, Grendel’s monstrous mother, and a dragon—and then dies, mortally wounded during his last encounter. If the definition of a superhero is “someone who uses his special powers to fight evil,” then Beowulf is our first English superhero story, and arguably our best. It is also a deeply pious poem, so bold in its reverence for a virtuous pagan past that it teeters on the edge of heresy. From beginning to end, we feel we are in the hands of a master storyteller. Stephen Mitchell’s marvelously clear and vivid rendering re-creates the robust masculine music of the original. It both hews closely to the meaning of the Old English and captures its wild energy and vitality, not just as a deep “work of literature” but also as a rousing entertainment that can still stir our feelings and rivet our attention today, after more than a thousand years. This new translation—spare, sinuous, vigorous in its narration, and translucent in its poetry—makes a masterpiece accessible to everyone.

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