Humanities Annotated Bibliography
Annotated Bibliography
Beowulf: A dual-language edition. (1977). NY: Doubleday. One of the most striking examples of literature to come out of the Dark Ages was Beowulf, created by an anonymous Anglo-Saxon poet and considered by many scholars to be the most important work of its time. There is no official date to the work, but it has been traced to somewhere between the 8th and the early 11th Century. The work is important because of its length and quality, but also because of the tale it tells and how it brought a strong focus to literature and art both in the Dark Ages and after the country emerged from that time period. It focuses on Beowulf's defeat of Grendel, a monster that is terrorizing the King of the Danes. As the main character, Beowulf travels a great distance to prove himself as a hero by slaying Grendel. As he goes up against supernatural beasts and impossible odds, Beowulf becomes an excellent metaphor for the rising spirit of mankind that came about as the Dark Ages started to come to an end. Throughout the Dark Ages, people needed something to cling to and something to hope for. They received messages of hope through epic poetry such as Beowulf, and that kept their interest in literature, as well. As an art form, Beowulf is looked upon with interest by scholars still today. Because it is all alliterative, it is both art and literature. The quality of the writing and phrasing is as important...
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