Classical and Medieval Literature Criticism


Cynewulf | Joseph Wittig (essay date 1975)

Joseph Wittig (essay date 1975)

SOURCE: Joseph Wittig, "Figural Narrative in Cynewulf's Juliana," in Anglo-Saxon: England, Cambridge University Press, Vol. 4, 1975, pp. 37-55.

[In the following essay, Wittig claims that the critical "dissatisfaction" with Cynewulf's Juliana neglects the poem's successful representation of the significance of the saint's passion.]

Old English saints' lives, as a group, have not generated a great deal of critical enthusiasm; and Cynewulf's Juliana has often been regarded as the worst of a bad lot. One of the poem's recent editors sees in it a 'uniformity verging on monotony' and finds it 'unrelieved by any emotional or rhetorical emphasis or by any other gradations in tone'.1 While critics concede that all Cynewulf's signed poems have a smooth texture and contain 'fine passages', they regard Juliana as something of an embarrassment and generally assign it to the poet's...

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