Criticism > Classical and Medieval Literature Criticism > Beowulf - Paull F. Baum (essay date 1960)
Beowulf - Paull F. Baum (essay date 1960)
Paull F. Baum (essay date 1960)
SOURCE: “The Beowulf Poet,” in Philological Quarterly, Vol. XXXIX, No. 4, October, 1960, pp. 389-99.
[In the essay below, Baum explores the possible audience for which Beowulf was composed and argues that internal evidence suggests the poet intended to create a “quasi-heroic” poem for his own enjoyment, with the hope that others might also be pleased with his work.]
Some years ago (1936) Professor Tolkien, in his British Academy lecture, created an academic stir with his complaints that the scholars had been too busy about their own concerns and had neglected the criticism of Beowulf as a poem.1 Latterly, Miss Whitelock (1951) attempted to recreate the ‘audience’ of Beowulf in the interests of bringing forward its date from the early to the late eighth century.2 Though the two subjects are not closely related, one may be used to throw light on...
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Criticism
- Paull F. Baum (essay date 1960)
- Eric Stanley (essay date 1966)
- John Leyerle (essay date 1967)
- Larry D. Benson (essay date 1967)
- Margaret E. Goldsmith (essay date 1970)
- Gwyn Jones (essay date 1972)
- Elisabeth M. Liggins (essay date 1973)
- Ramond J. S. Grant (essay date 1975)
- Kathryn Hume (essay date 1975)
- Kevin S. Kiernan (essay date 1981)
- J. D. A. Ogilvy (essay date 1983)
- Bernard F. Huppé (essay date 1984)
- Stanley B. Greenfield (essay date 1985)
- Alain Renoir (essay date 1988)
- Stephen S. Evans (essay date 1997)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
