Verbal Encounters: Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse Studies for Roberta Frank

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University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2005 - Literary Criticism - 298 pages

Due to conquests and colonialism through the centuries, it is not unusual for languages and cultures to be influenced by other, foreign languages and cultures. The modern English language, for example, owes many of its words to Old Norse and Latin, debts dating from contacts made during the Middle Ages. Verbal Encounters is a collection of papers on the cultural and linguistic exchange in Old Norse, Old English, and medieval Latin literature written in honour of Roberta Frank, former University Professor of Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto.

The essays feature new scholarship in the field, on topics such as the integral position of Anglo-Latin within Anglo-Saxon culture and literature, constructions of feminine strength and effectiveness in Anglo-Saxon literature, the rise of Latin-based learning in twelfth-century Iceland, medieval Icelandic religious poetry, and the conversion to Christianity in medieval Scandinavia.

The essays in Verbal Encounters are not merely a fitting tribute to Roberta Frank, but also strong contributions to current scholarship on medieval literature and culture.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
How the AngloSaxons
39
3
45
The Polysemousness
77
Style Memory and the Teachable Moment
91
The Vercelli Book
105
Runes in Old English Poetry
145
Articulate Contact in Juliana
183
Einarr Skúlasons Liturgical Theology
203
Gaman vas Soxu The Sex Was Great
223
Prophetic Dreams and Visions in the Sagas of the Early
247
Claiming Kin SkaldicStyle
269
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS 285 B888888
285
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About the author (2005)

Antonina Harbus is a lecturer in the Department of English at Macquarie University. Russell Poole is a professor in the Department of English at the University of Western Ontario.

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