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  • Publication date:
    September 2012
    February 2011
    ISBN:
    9781846158377
    9781843842613
    Dimensions:
    Weight & Pages:
    00kg,
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    Book description

    'A senior scholar writing here at the height of his powers and bringing experience and insight to an important topic... the second chapter is one of the best short, general introductions to the artistry of the poem I have read... A dizzying and engaging narrative.' Dr Chris Jones, Senior Lecturer in English Poetry, Department of English, University of St Andrews. Translations of the Old English poem 'Beowulf' proliferate, and their number continues to grow. Focusing on the particularly rich period since 1950, this book presents a critical account of translations in English verse, setting them in the contexts both of the larger story of the recovery and reception of the poem and of perceptions of it over the past two hundred years, and of key issues in translation theory. Attention is also paid to prose translation and to the creative adaptations of the poem that have been produced in a variety of media, not least film. The author looks in particular at four translations of arguably the most literary and historical importance: those by Edwin Morgan [1952], Burton Raffel [1963], Michael Alexander [1973] and Seamus Heaney [1999]. But, from an earlier period, he also gives a full account of William Morris's strange 1898 version. Hugh Magennis is Professor of Old English Literature at Queen's University Belfast.

    Reviews

    While much of this history is known to Anglo-Saxonists, Magennis offers to a broader readership a wide-ranging and lively synthesis of Beowulf scholarship, informed by his own clear enthusiasm for the subject and his authoritative grasp of Old English and Latin.'

    Source: Translation and Literature

    An important study which will interest students of translation and reception theory and initiates and acolytes of Old English literary culture. Highly recommended.'

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