Via Rome: Medieval Medievalisms in the Old English Ruin
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Download: Critten2019c.pdf (269.80 [Ko])
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Version: author
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Serval ID
serval:BIB_9C63432A50DA
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Via Rome: Medieval Medievalisms in the Old English Ruin
Journal
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
ISSN
1082-9636
1527-8263
1527-8263
Publication state
Published
Issued date
05/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
49
Number
2
Pages
209-231
Language
english
Abstract
Examining the complex imbrication of Roman and legendary Germanic history in the Old English poem The Ruin, this essay addresses the notion of medieval medievalisms: the processes by which identities subsequently defined as medieval were conceived within the medieval period itself. The argument deploys grammatical analysis to demonstrate the blurring of linear time in the text, which invites readers to think about the past in terms not only of what has been lost but also of what might be gained, or regained, in the future. This split perspective on history is shown to be symptomatic of Anglo-Saxon attitudes to Rome, a city that inspired both hope and horror in early English minds. Legendary Germanic identity is thus identified as an early medieval production and as a means of understanding history that encompasses both different times and different cultures.
Keywords
Old English poem The Ruin, medievalism, legendary Germanic history, city of Rome, Anglo-Saxon historical consciousness
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Create date
24/04/2018 8:50
Last modification date
05/11/2020 7:09