Wednesday, October 03, 2012


The editorial staff of The Heroic Age is pleased to announce the release of
Issue 15. Issue 15 contains articles on Late Antiquity, Arthuriana, and
Folklore, as well as an edition of the Annales Cambriae from the time of St.
Patrick through 682. The issue can be found at
http://www.heroicage.org/issues/15/toc.php. The editorial staff would like
to thank all our contributors, staff, and volunteer copy-editors. We would
also like to thank Memorial University of Newfoundland for continuing to
host The Heroic Age.

Larry Swain
EIC, Heroic Age

Sunday, September 02, 2012

Monsters, Sex, Violence, and Some Pleasantries

The above is a title of a junior level class I'm teaching this semester.  It's a new prep.  I am trying to have a regular rotation of Anglo-Saxon, Chaucer and His Age, Middle English lit, Medieval Lit (outside the English tradition mostly), and Shakespeare.  Shakespeare has to be taught yearly, and I have other course commitments, so I've done Chaucer, and now Medieval Lit, and will likely do Anglo-Saxon next fall (Spring will be British and World Poetry, a lib ed level course, chiefly epics, Shakespeare again, and a grad level Middle English, and likely an online continuation of Latin Readings, and directed readings in OE, and a few theses to direct, chair duties, faculty senate committees, and so on). I'm not entirely happy, but I'm hoping some things won't take as much time as I have scheduled so that I can stretch the amount of time devoted to others.  
  1. Introductions and Backgrounds
  2. EPIC I: Dares and the Matter of Troy
  3. Epic II: Germanic Epic
  4. Epic III: Celtic Epic
  5. Chanson de Geste
  6. Romance I
  7. Romance II
  8. Romance III (Prologue, 5 Lovers, Khalifah)
  9. Ghosts, Demons, Devils and things
  10. Bestiary, Beast Fables
  11. Whale Week!
  12. Sinbad the Sailor!
  13. Fridhjof, Etc.
  14. Volsunga
  15. Kraki
  16. Ali Baba


MISSING: Bestiary, Fabliaux, Beast Fable, Saint’s Lives, Travelers Tales

Aug. 27—Syllabus
Aug. 29—Foundations 1&2
Aug 31—Wonders of the East, God’s Tumbler
Sept 3—Labor Day
Sept. 5—Galloway Intro and Chap. 1 to pg. 17, 64-68, ; Lewis 1 and 2; Dares to pg. 16;
Sept. 7—Dares finish, Group Assigns
Sept. 10—Hildebrandslied, Ludwigslied, Galloway 17-33;
Sept. 12—Waltharius and Waldere
Sept. 14—Planctus of William Longsword, Lewis 3
Sept. 17—The Tain, before the and I, II, III
Sept 19—IV, V, VI, VII, VIII (pg. 137)
Sept. 21—IX, X, XI
Sept. 24—Finish Tain, Lewis 4
Sept. 26--Roland, Galloway 33-48
Sept. 28—Roland, Finish, Galloway 74-82
Oct. 1—Lewis 5-6; Capellanus, Romance of the Rose selections, Aug. and Jerome on Marriage, etc.
Oct. 3—Lewis 7; Lanval
Oct. 5—Lewis 8; Yvain
Oct. 8—Yvain finish, The Marvelous
Oct. 10—Lancelot, The Wild
Oct. 12—Lancelot, Finish
Oct. 15—Prologue, The Tales of the Hunchback
Oct. 17—Midterm
Oct. 19 –No Class, Faculty Duty Day
Oct. 22—Porter and Three Girls…whole
Oct. 24—Maruf the Cobbler, Epilogue
Oct. 26--5 Lovers, the donkey, the historic fart
Oct. 29—Ghosts I
Oct. 31—Demons (Genesis A and B), Muspilli, Man who visited heaven and hell, Visio Pauli
Nov. 2—Ghosts and Demons and an Angel (more ghost stories, visions of hell, of heaven)
Nov. 5 Bestiary, Physiologus, etc. Liber Monstrorum
Nov. 7—Beast Fables—Reynard the Fox
Nov. 9—Beast Fables—Bisclavet (Marie de France)
Nov. 12—No classes, Vets’ Day
Nov. 14—WHALES: Within, rvw. Bestiary, Columba and the Whale, other snippets
Nov. 16.—Voyage of St. Brendan
Nov. 19—Sinbad the Sailor, the whole
Nov. 21—No class, on Duty
Nov. 23—Day after T-DAY!!
Nov. 26—Volsunga, Ross 2 (big break, big reading)
Nov. 28—Volsunga Saga
Nov. 30—Hrolf Kraki Ross 3,
Dec. 3—Hrolf Kraki
Dec. 5—Hrolf Kraki Ross 7
Dec. 7—Aladdin and the Lamp
Dec. 10—Aladdin; Last Day.








Group I—Makers of the Middle Ages
Group II—other genres

So, the second in the Medieval series is this one.  There is much tweaking to be done in the process of teaching sadly. But the students are game.

Texts I chose, not entirely happily:
Lewis, Discarded Image
Galloway, Medieval Literature and Culture (which is really about ENGLISH lit, but it was cheaper than most of the other texts I looked at and covers the material).

Song of Roland (Harrison)
Selections from 1001 Nights (Penguin)
Arthurian Romances (Penguin)
Volsunga Saga (Penguin)
Saga of Hrolf Kraki (Penguin)

The rest, both secondary material and primary provided either via library readings or photocopies.   Here then is the current, tentative schedule of readings to be adjusted with more or less as need requires:


Sunday, August 26, 2012

CFP

Call for Papers: Anglo-Saxon and Old Saxon Cross-Cultural
Connections (1)

This session builds on a previous session in 2012 comparing the Heliand and Beowulf. Two similar cultures that in part at least grew out of the same roots in the late Roman period and certainly at various points in time influenced one another. Yet, other than studies in comparative metrics, there has been very little comparative study of these two cultures or much of any depth on their mutual influence nor how they developed differently after the migration of some Saxons to England. Such comparative analysis is long overdue and promises to yield a greater understanding of the medieval Northwest in Europe.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Must Reading!

This is an impressive and well thought out post on the plight of the American university.  Everyone with an interest in higher education should read this; it is so spot on.  Read here.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Madly Writing for Years Work in Old English Studies...

So, been busy, and a bit lazy.  Both simultaneously.  One thing that I've both been busy doing, i. e. reading and taking notes, and not writing up but playing on social media instead, have been my contributions to the YWOES.  So below are a couple of reviews in process that I thought some my be interested in.


Rosewell, Roger. Medieval Wall Paintings in English and Welsh Churches. Woodbridge: Boydell P, 2008. 380 pp. ill.

Art historians have been hailing the publication of this volume.  It is the first such book of its kind in half a century.  Rosewell provides in the six chapters with copious color plates a thorough handbook to wall paintings in churches.  After a brief introduction, the chapters cover the history of medieval wall paintings in brief, the what or iconography of the paintings, the patrons and painters who produced them, their methods of production, the interpretation of the works of art, and finally their restoration.  Rosewell also provides a gazetteer, a subject guide, a bibliography.  Perhaps most importantly, the photographs in the book are fabulous. 

That said, there is regrettably little of interest for the Anglo-Saxonist.  This is principally because according to Rosewell there are very few from the Anglo-Saxon period that survive.  In fact, that is a general problem with the subject: less than 10% of the medieval churches that survive in England and Wales have paintings or part of paintings that survive, and that percentage plummets for any church dated before the twelfth century. The few that do survive are mentioned or examined briefly, but not in great detail: the history portion for Anglo-Saxon churches covers a page and a half, including photographs. 

Of greater interest are later depictions in church painting of Anglo-Saxon saints.  St. Dunstan, St. Swithun and other Anglo-Saxon saints do make appearances in some churches, particularly in the twelfth century.  But though saints, even Anglo-Saxon saints, form a portion of wall paintings and other decoration, they are outnumbered by depictions of holy history, particularly biblical events.  So even here, while there is material of interest, the book is of limited use directly for Anglo-Saxon studies.

It is a book hailed by art historians.  It is a beautiful book with a great deal of information.  The author has written his work to straddle the lines between a scholarly and non-scholarly audience, an approach that has both strengths and weaknesses.  One such weakness is that when the author cites primary literature, there are no references given making tracing the reference difficult at best.  The select bibliography in the back is insufficient to overcome this frustration. But this is but one weakness in an otherwise very strong book.

Quite apart from what interest there is for the Anglo-Saxonist, the purpose of this assessment, there is an important argument that Rosewell makes in the book.  We are all familiar with the interpretation of stained glass windows, sculpture, and paintings in churches as “books for the illiterate”, depictions of  biblical stories, saints, and other matters related to the faith for those who could not read.  Rosewell rejects this interpretation of wall paintings (and by extension other forms of graphic art).  Rosewell places paintings in a different category to other forms of art, though: the church structure itself is not just the support of the painting, but the walls and plaster are the canvas.  More importantly though, he argues that paintings cannot be merely “books for the illiterate” since to derive meaning from the painting, one must know the story.  Rather he argues that the depictions of holy scenes are an integral part of the worship and liturgy, aids to contemplation and prayer, rather than didactic tools for the unlearned.  These need not be exclusive interpretations, but Rosewell does mount a good argument to reject the typical understanding of wall paintings in churches.

While there is little directly applicable to Anglo-Saxon England in the book, it nonetheless is an excellent overview of the subject.  Every photograph is printed in color and there are a number of details, the text is clearly written and informative. All in all, this is an excellent book and a good contribution to the field. 

Lightfoot, Emma, Tamsin C. O’Connell et al. “An Investigation into Diet at the Site of Yarnton, Oxfordshire, Using Stable Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopes.” Oxford Jnl of Archaeology 28 (2009), 301-22.

Yarnton in Oxfordshire, near Eynsham, called Erdington, has a long period of continual occupation.  The article here examines in particular remains found in a small cemetery covering the Nealothic, Roman, and Saxon periods.  The authors studied the isotopes of the remains in order to determine diet; in some ways the finds were unsurprising.  Fortunately, in other ways there were surprises.  For example, though the site is on a river, there was no evidence of a fish diet.  Yarnton was low status both before and after the Roman occupation; after the Romans left, the site seems to have been abandoned for a time though even within the fifth century Saxon buildings appear.  Crops shift somewhat during this period, not unusually in the shift from Roman to Saxon, from spelt to bread wheat.  But one unusual crop feature is the presence of emmer wheat.  Other crops make their appearances for the first time in the Saxon period: peas, legume, and crops grown for fodder.  Saxon and Roman inhabitants had higher levels of delta 13C isotopes indicating a diet that included animals with a higher proportion of those isotopes such as pigs and the consumption of fewer ruminates and horses.  An alternative explanation may be that these inhabitants consumed more millet or fat hen (a common plant known by other names such as wild spinach, goosefoot, pigweed, and other names). 

The study did not simply examine the diets of the human inhabitants.  The porcine bones indicate that the pigs ate an ominverous diet, perhaps more so than the humans but certainly more so than the ruminates and horses.  The canines inhabitants were the most carnivorous of all. 

In addition to these results, the article contains a large section on the materials and methodology with tables of results for those interested.


Thursday, June 14, 2012

Kalamazoo 2012

Well, it has been a long time since I have posted here.  I've always enjoyed blogging, a way to express some thoughts, gather some thoughts, outline the beginnings of future research, or just to exchange ideas with others through blog posts and comments that can go further than discussions via email.  By way of ruminating on my absence, I confess that I almost gave up blogging.  Last year's kerfluffle left such a bad taste in my mouth, and I had begun so many responses over the ensuing months, that I just did not want to return here and post.  Not that there would have been many posts: as chair of my department dealing with all the thrilling things going on at my university this past year, Especially last fall, all the meetings and new preps kept me swamped.  Still, I composed posts, and those posts responded in various ways to last year's fun, and increasingly left a bad, bad taste in my mouth and made me want to give up blogging altogether. Hey, I know myself; I called this The Ruminate for a reason: I do ruminate on things, sometimes for eons.

Honestly, what has redeemed the whole process for me was Kalamazoo 2012.  I in fact dreaded attending this year.  But as it turned out, it was a fabulous time and after a successful and jam packed Congress, I decided to stop ruminating on last year and my colleagues elseblog, in spite of some weirdness stemming from last year's dust up occurring at this year's event.

So that said, here's my report for Kalamazoo 2012.  This year, I feel old.  I feel old because now I have had the pleasure of bringing one of my very own graduate students to her first International Congress on Medieval Studies. That was amusing though.  It was a pleasure both to bring her into my networks, but also watch as she did her own networking, building relationships that will become part of her professional life henceforth.  That was fun.  And thank God she was there to do the drive home!  I was exhausted!

Anyway, we actually left Bemidji on Tuesday.  I wanted to be able to get to Kalamazoo at about dinner time on Wednesday, so that meant either driving part way on Tuesday or leaving at an ungodly early hour on Wednesday.   Not being a grand Sadly, I was unable to get a lot of errands done that Monday and Tuesday before leaving, so I was bearded this year.  Usually the beard comes off before the trek to the southern climes of southern Michigan.  But other than ungodly traffic through Chicago, the road trip was uneventful. 

We arrived a little after 7 Eastern time, immediately ran into Yvette Kisor and Lynne Wollstadt.  Then it was off to Bilbo's where Yvette, Lynne, Bruce Gilchrist, Bill Schipper, and Chris Vaccaro.  Even in the "new digs," and let's face it, the Stadium Drive location will always be the new digs for us old timers, the pizza and hopped beverages were as good as ever, but the company even better.  As we all know, the great thing about the Kalamazoo conference is the web and weft of conversation that weaves personal and professional of many hues into a delightful evening.  Other medievalists were spotted in the process and stopped to say hello.

Thursday morning dawned bright and clear and it looked like the weather was going to cooperate.  First up was Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture meeting, catching up on the progress of the project.  Happily all volumes are spoken for.  I myself intend to make some significant SASLC progress this year.

I spent the first session in...where else?...the exhibit hall with Lyla going over the books.  I bought more this year than I have in the past.  This professor gig where I get to buy books and be reimbursed for them is capital.  But it was also nice to help Lyla furnish her own academic library, something that I sometimes wish my own advisers had taken more interest in when I was a wee grad student.  Then it was off to lunch at the Mediterranean place up on Main.  Delicious food, but the waitress was slower than molasses.  Bill Schipper came with us on that trip.  Bill is always a great guy to talk to.  I've really appreciated him over the years.

Thursday afternoon both of my sessions were held.  The first, A Reckoning: Translation as Culture Change and Culture Clash I co-sponsored with Mary Ramsey.  Sadly Mary didn't make the session, nor did the third speaker.  Jonathan Davis-Secord read an interesting paper on how Old English writers handle sources, talking a bit about glossing, but also just sources in general.  I'm not sure he answer his question though: "Hiding or Highlighting"?  Honestly, the practice is so varied even among the works of the same author, that trying to say anything definitive is difficult.  Part of it is surely human nature: we're not always aware that we are quoting someone or something we've read. But anyway, it was an interesting paper. Bruce Gilchrist also "read" on the Heliand, a really cool observation of how the Heliand author makes use of the "light" in the Greek text of the Transfiguration scenes in the gospels that are not present in the Latin text, so some cool stuff.

The second session was one I co-sponsored with Kathie Meyer who retired at BSU last year.  But we did a session on Beowulf and the Heliand in Cross Cultural Perspective.  We received three solid submissions.  And as life turns out, neither my co-sponsor nor the third speaker turned out for this one either.  So we had two papers and a pretty large audience.  Tom Bredehoft read on what comparative meter studies. particularly the Heliand, can tell us about the dating of Old English poetry.  Much of this is now covered in his recent works. but he made an argument (if I now am remembering with any accuracy) that traced various changes in the Germanic tradition, changes in OE poetic practices, and concluded that where these changes are not shared suggests lack of influence, and at some points we can point to influence (such as the Alfredian period and immediately after) of OS on OE.  In the end, Tom admitted that his method hadn't really changed the traditional dates of any of the poems in the Anglo-Saxon corpus, but this is one method by which they might be dated.  The second paper by Breann Leake dealt with concept of Wyrd, Fate, in the Heliand, the Wyrd of God.  I'm hoping to put together a volume of essays on comparative studies of OS, OE, and OHG and we have 3 solid papers to begin.

Post session was a brief run through the exhibit hall, they were already out of "wine" when I got there, but that was ok since I was heading off to the Blogger Meet-Up.  It was going to be a brief visit as I had dinner plans with old friends; I kept it loose for dinner 6-6:30, but in the end it was a meet-up at 5:30 with some members of my party concerned about getting a seat anywhere for dinner if we delayed....and since I was the only reason to delay because of the Blogger Meet-Up the pressure was on to keep it short.  So it was really an unfortunate dash through the room, to say hello to Vaulting and Vellum, shake hands with Steve Muhlberger, exchange a few quick words with Curt Emanuel, hug the incredible ADM, and wave to Elizabeth Carnell and then bug out rudely to whisk us off to dinner.

Dinner was my annual visit to the Olde Penninsula, an old haunt from K'zoo days that I remain rather fond of; any place with good burgers and good beer is pretty good in my book.  Present were Judy Krane-Calvert, Dot Porter and son, Mel Harris Eichbauer, Lyla (poor kid), and Sarah Sprouse.  The last in the group is a newly minted MA looking for a PhD program, probably in the DC area...more importantly though, she is the Assistant to the Editor (me) of The Heroic Age.  SO we gathered her up for dinner.

Since we had dinner so early and everyone had things to do and places to go, after dropping everyone off Lyla and I were at loose ends, so we ended up driving around town for a bit before finally heading back to change into reception garb and attend.  Naturally a grand time was had, how could we not with such a great crowd?

Friday morning was a beautiful one, and even better post coffee.  First session Lyla and I headed up to Schneider to take in Yvette Kisor's paper in a session sponsored by Shannon Godlove Words and Deeds in ASE.  Yvette read on the relationship of words and deeds and how that related to gender, looking in particular at Judith and Juliana.  I won't say much more about this one as I have to quote it in a paper underway for publication.  This was followed by a paper on Becoming a Man in OE Precepts.  I confess that I don't recall much about this one.  I recall that I didn't know this text and was interested to find out that the Precepts had a section on becoming a man, much like the Biblical proverbs and other sapiental traditions.  But I truly don't recall much else (as I get older I find that I remember less, sadly, but am very poor at taking notes post-grad school).  The last paper of the session was delivered by Jill Hamilton-Clements "Death and Salvation in the Runic Signatures of Cynewulf".  The central argument here was that the puzzle pieces of the runic letters are a form, a way that the author signifies death, a state of brokenness in need of holy healing, so that the requests for prayers for his soul and salvation in which the signatures are embedded are the poet's salvation, making the name whole in prayer if you will.  It was really quite an intriguing and well done paper and I wish I'd have thought of it!  I hope she publishes with me or at least gets it out there soon.

There was a pretty decent crowd at this one.  I was able to say hello to Brandon Hawk, an up and comer and all round v smart chap, but I don't think he recognized me with the beard of omens that I was sporting for the weekend.  I was also able to exchange greetings with David di Tucci, sadly the only time he and I had a chance to exchange the news the entire weekend.  David and Michael Fletcher are working on a project for HA that I'm excited about, so hopefully mentioning however obliquely here will help move this forward.

I lost my program somewhere with all the people I was meeting up with and eating with in it....so I had to buy a new one.  Fortunately I had dispersed my cell number widely and folk now know how to use text messaging enabling me to rebuild the schedule.  Still, there were burps.  Friday lunch was one such.   After the session, Lyla, Yvette, and Lynn decided to go to lunch.  While on our way to check in with others down the hill, Deanna Forsman texted about our scheduled lunch.  So, lunch became a moderate size group of the five of us.  We went to Food Dance, I hadn't made it to Food Dance since they moved, some years ago now, so it was good to be able to eat there.  This is really one of my favorite places to eat of all the places in all of cities I've lived.  Anyway, as it happened, Deanna and I sat on one side of our booth and talked about matters of The Heroic Age, the other three sat on the other side of the booth and chatted....well I don't know about what, I was busy talking about HA stuff.  Still, grand company, good food, and the chance to talk about things medieval.

 Post lunch I went to my first ever Tolkien session!  I know, you must be shaking your head that I, Tolkienista, big mouth, opionated Tolkien fan, had never been to a K'zoo Tolkien session.  But off we went...well some of us.  Lyla had a session she wanted to get to, Lynne was off to nap, Deanna was presiding a session...so it was Yvette and I off to the Tolkien session on Sigurd and Guthrun.  I was still undecided as there were A-S sessions and such at the same time.  But I was really going to the session because of Merlin DeTardo.  Merlin is one of the nicest, kindest, and most intelligent human beings I have ever met.  He's a Tolkienist and for some reason has seen fit to come to several of my papers over the years.  Merlin rarely reads.  I was told that this was his first paper, though in the talk he said it was his second.  Nonetheless, the point is that this was a rare opportunity to see Merlin in action so I'd better take it.

Naturally we were a few minutes late, so I waited until the first speaker was done before finding a seat, so I missed that paper.  The second of the session dealt with....I don't know, the post lunch sleepies was catching up and I struggled.  This is no reflection on the speaker to whom I apologize, it is simply a reflection on me.  By the third paper I was doing better, a few well placed pinches, oxygenating, etc did the trick.  This paper was meant to be a joint project and something went awry and it isn't.  In any case, though not fighting the sleep, I had a hard time following the paper.  So I was grateful when Merlin started. Essentially, Merlin did a "source critical" thing on Tolkien's Sigurd and Guthrun, and it was good, so very good.  I hope he writes it up to publish soon!  But as some know, I am a sucker for source criticism and there is simply too little good source criticism on Tolkien (not none, too little).

I have some opinions about things Digital.  So at 3:30 session I attended the Sustainability session sponsored by Digital Medievalist.  It was an interesting discussion and somewhat enlightening in what grant organizations are asking for: the contradictory requirements that the data be given away free but that the project also have a sustainability plan, which if the data is being given away free takes away the primary way a project can be sustained long term.  In any case, the importance of sustainable projects that will still work 20 years from now is vitally important. As interesting as this session was, though, it meant missing Bill Schipper's presentation in another session about some new Hrabanus mss finds, in fact this was breaking news as Bill was reporting on three new finds and had the day of his paper found out that a fourth had been found.  I'm sad to have missed this one.

Friday night is the usual Anglo-Saxonists dinner.  I signed up this year, but decided to start my own tradition.  So I made reservations for 10 at a nice restaurant and gathered Yvette, Bruce Gilchrist, Lyla, Chris Vaccaro, Scott Nokes, Sarah McCann, Ken Coyne, and a couple of others had a delightful time--not too large a group, not too small, and a mix of people who don't usually come together at the same time and place.  The only problem was the younguns sat at one end and us oldsters at the other, we should have mixed it up a bit more to make a less bifurcated discussion.  Still, a grand time.
Then off to reception land.

Saturday dawned and while there were some good sessions I really should have gone to, I didn't and spent more time in the book hall.  I wanted to get all the way through this year and was a bit weary.  So I had an enjoyable morning amongst the book stalls.  *SIGH*  T'were loverly.   Lunch time came and Lyla was off to the De Re Militaria and I was meeting up with Shannon Ambrose for lunch at the Indian place up the hill.  Love that buffet.  It was grand to see Shannon, it had actually been several years.  Shannon is doing some good Hiberno-Latin work, so I'm keeping an eye on her.

Saturday afternoon was the hours of Bede for me.  In the first Bede session that I attended (not the first Bede session, mind you) presided over by Sharon Rowley whose book on the OE Bede I'd just purchased, I heard three papers. Well, three were scheduled.  One didn't show up.  Sadly it was one I wanted to hear as in a paper I have in prep I take that author's position to task so I was interested to hear the author on a related topic.  The next paper was by Conor O'Brien Bede and His Enemies, The Letter to Ecgbert.  I confess again that I remember little about this paper; especially since Thacker's article arguing for Bede the reformer that the Letter to Ecgbert is directed at "Bede's enemies" though enemy might be too strong a word.  As I recall this paper, while building on this, it didn't really further my understanding any.  That's not to say it was not a good paper, well delivered, and solid research evident....au contraire.  All of those things were true.  But it didn't really further my own research or understanding of 8th century Northumbria.  The last paper in this session was by Walter Goffart, Bede as Deliberate Historian.  The evening before Sarah McCann, who works on Bede, wondered if Goffart still held the opinions he did in Narrators of Barbarian History.  This paper certainly answered that question beyond any doubt.  Yep, he sure does: the paper reiterated that position in spades, Bede chose his material for the HE carefully and left a lot about Wilfrid in particular completely out of his tale.  The problem I've always had with Goffart's argument is that it privileges a piece of hagiography that he takes as telling the truth about Wilfrid over a work of historiography that when we can verify it independently is fairly sound.  This isn't to say that Bede isn't a "deliberate historian" or doesn't have a definite point of view in the HE; it just seems to me that if one is going to accuse Bede of leaving material about Wilfrid out, we should have a reasonable level of confidence that Stephanus is actually relating the truth about Wilfrid, and that Bede's deliberate choices are not leaving out things that make Wilfrid look good, but things Bede knows didn't happen, or didn't happen in the way that Stephanus says.  Bede is always a deliberate writer and judicious in his choices from his sources, so the question becomes why he chose this element but not that one; I'm not yet convinced that that issue has been resolved.  For one thing, by the time Bede is writing the HE, Wilfrid's been dead 20 years, and Stephanus' vita is almost that old.  So the question is, how much anti-Wilfridian sentiment remains, and how much Wilfridian support and can we prove it since Bede is largely our only source?

The second Bede session I attended was up the hill of course.  This one was presided over by old friend Josh Westgard.  Gernot Wieland was up first on Bede's comments regarding the indolence, the laziness, of his countrymen.  Wieland  looked at a statement by Bede regarding  his fellow countrymen being "indolent"; through some careful and creative reading Wieland argued that rather than "indolente" in the text, it should be read as in in dolente....a much different meaning (in pain rather than lazy) and a better fit in the context.  Next came a paper on peripherality in Bede, Bede's knowledge of "being on the edge".  This one needed more work, but was fine as far as it went.  Last came Sarah McCann who read on a scholar's comment about something being "a very Irish thing to do" demonstrating that it wasn't very Irish and very Anglo-Saxon.  The last scheduled paper didn't show.

Dinner this evening was with Thea Cervone, Asa Mittman, Lyla, Mary Leech and a new acquaintance that I am embarrassed enough to admit not to recall the name though I recall the face!  But we headed down to London Grill for dinner (Lamb Curry here) and the annual obligatory STICKY TOFFEE PUDDING!!!  OMG!! And I have to say this expat kitchen in Kalamazoo makes a fantastic STICKY TOFFEE PUDDING!!!  SO GOOD.  And another evening spent in the company of delightful people. 

Our dinner companions headed off to Dark Shadows movie while Lyla and I headed back to change and have a little down time before heading up the hill to the St. Louis reception.  The latter was a much quieter affair than in years past, smaller crowd, wetter and colder evening...but new friends were made nonetheless, Christian McGuire of Augsburg, and Jon Porter at Butler.  Then of course is the dance....I spent a good deal of it standing in one place talking to various people who came by.  So it was actually a good two plus hours in before I actually danced.  I spent most of my dance time with Chris Vaccaro, Yvette, Lynn, Bruce, Merlin DeTardon, and Jane Chance whilst grad student Lyla was off with her Irish acquaintances dancing away.  As usual, t'was a good time.  Post dance, I, since I had a van, dropped some people off at various locations, a few of us went down to Bruce Gilchrist's digs, a little B&B on the other side of the Kalamazoo College campus, and had a nice chat.  I discovered that Yvette had also majored in Greek!  I was nonplussed at that, I didn't know anyone else that crazy.

I also have the best of intentions to make it to at least one Sunday morning session.  Especially since the last several years the "new voices" session of SASLC has been on Sunday morns.  But alas, as usual I didn't make it.   And there were some good paper titles that I was interested in too.  But I needed coffee, and I got up late, and so I decided to finish the book room, and then one conversation led to another and I missed the second morning session, so darn I had to go spend money at the UT booth for the sale books. 

After packing up and checking out, Lyla and I went and ended the congress where it began: pizza at Bilbos.  It was about 2 o'clock when we pulled out of K'zoo and we wanted to get back so we drove all the way through, and I spent most of the next three weeks napping.

I don't know what the official numbers were.  Lisa Carnell told me that as of Wed going in they had about as many pre-registers as the year before.  But a lot of people weren't there this year; others were there that I encountered only briefly (ADM, Curt Emanuel, David di Tucci, Paul Szarmach, Bridgette Slavin) and others that I know were there whom I did not see at all (Paul Gans, Rhonda McDaniel, Heather Flowers) and fewer new contacts this year than in years past.  Among the good things to come out of the conference though will be some good things for Heroic Age, some good opportunities for BSU students, and my thesis advisee began the process of professionalizing and comported herself well.  So another successful Congress down and ready to think about next year.

  



Saturday, March 03, 2012

Summer Latin and Old English

Please pass along to any and all interested parties and forgive duplications:

Hello all, I am pleased to off the two courses listed below this summer online. There are both undergraduate and graduate options. If you are not a Bemidji State University student, directions on admission can be found here: http://www.bemidjistate.edu/academics/distance/admissions/ The ability to use basic software is required, and much will be delivered through D2L, a Blackboard like software that the student will be able to access once enrolled for the class. I’m looking forward to see some of you there!


 ENGL 3930/5930 Intensive Latin Online 
Dr. Larry Swain 
Bemidji State University 

 Course Description: This course is an intensive introduction to Latin, covering in eight weeks a full academic year’s worth of the language. This will require a lot of work and dedication on the part of both instructor and student. By the end, however, the student should be able to read Latin prose with the aid of a grammar and a good dictionary or lexicon. There will be a great deal of memorization. Via our online tools, discussion board, online office hours, recorded lectures, live lectures, exercise sharing and corrections, and Q&A sessions delivered via D2L, power point presentations, and other tools, we will go through the entire text and master basic Latin. The course will require a commitment from the student. A MINIMUM of 2 hours and preferably 4-6 hours a day will need to be spent working on the exercises, in class, interacting with the professor etc. Because delivery is online rather than in a traditional classroom, the need for each individual student to apply him- or herself diligently daily is even more important than in a face-to-face class. Four days a week we will meet virtually to explain the grammar lesson, to do some in class exercises, to correct exercises, and so on, for approximately two hours. The rest of your time will be spent working on exercises, translating sample passages of actual Latin, memorizing the forms. 

Texts: Intensive Latin by Floyd Moreland and Rita Fleischer 
Other materials as assigned
(I will have advice about students’ dictionaries, additional grammar aids in print and online and so on as well throughout the course). 
Highly Recommended: English Grammar for Students of Latin: The Study Guide for Those Learning Latin by Norma Goldman and Ladislas Szymanski 


English 3390/5390: 
Intensive Old English Summer 2012 
Dr. Larry J. Swain
 Bemidji State University 

This seminar is intended to accomplish three related objectives: 1) to learn to read Old English and translate texts in Old English with relative ease 2) to have an overview of Anglo-Saxon Literature and 3) to place the language and literature into the historical, cultural, theological, intellectual, and material contexts. That's a tall order. But like those we read who endure heroically, so shall we: we will be able to by semester's end read Old English literature in Old English, both prose and poetry. The approach is simple. This is an intensive course, a full 15 week course offered over less than 8 weeks in Summer delivered over D2L and the Internet. This means that the student will need to keep up and plan well. Missing some elements of the course will prevent successful 

. We will cover approximately two chapters a week, and during the last couple of weeks we will be working exclusively in translating Old English texts. This will require a serious commitment on the part of the student as well as the instructor. 

Textbooks: Reading Old English: An Introduction by Robert Hasenfratz and Thomas Jambeck
A History of Old English Literature by Michael Alexander 
Recommended: The Anglo-Saxons James Campbell 

Please pass along to any and all interested parties and forgive duplications: Hello all, I am pleased to off the two courses listed below this summer online. There are both undergraduate and graduate options. If you are not a Bemidji State University student, directions on admission can be found here: http://www.bemidjistate.edu/academics/distance/admissions/ The ability to use basic software is required, and much will be delivered through D2L, a Blackboard like software that the student will be able to access once enrolled for the class. I’m looking forward to see some of you there! ENGL 3930/5930 Intensive Latin Online Dr. Larry Swain Bemidji State University Course Description: This course is an intensive introduction to Latin, covering in eight weeks a full academic year’s worth of the language. This will require a lot of work and dedication on the part of both instructor and student. By the end, however, the student should be able to read Latin prose with the aid of a grammar and a good dictionary or lexicon. There will be a great deal of memorization. Via our online tools, discussion board, online office hours, recorded lectures, live lectures, exercise sharing and corrections, and Q&A sessions delivered via D2L, power point presentations, and other tools, we will go through the entire text and master basic Latin. The course will require a commitment from the student. A MINIMUM of 2 hours and preferably 4-6 hours a day will need to be spent working on the exercises, in class, interacting with the professor etc. Because delivery is online rather than in a traditional classroom, the need for each individual student to apply him- or herself diligently daily is even more important than in a face-to-face class. Four days a week we will meet virtually to explain the grammar lesson, to do some in class exercises, to correct exercises, and so on, for approximately two hours. The rest of your time will be spent working on exercises, translating sample passages of actual Latin, memorizing the forms. Texts: Intensive Latin by Floyd Moreland and Rita Fleischer Other materials as assigned (I will have advice about students’ dictionaries, additional grammar aids in print and online and so on as well throughout the course). Highly Recommended: English Grammar for Students of Latin: The Study Guide for Those Learning Latin by Norma Goldman and Ladislas Szymanski English 3390/5390: Intensive Old English Summer 2012 Dr. Larry J. Swain Bemidji State University This seminar is intended to accomplish three related objectives: 1) to learn to read Old English and translate texts in Old English with relative ease 2) to have an overview of Anglo-Saxon Literature and 3) to place the language and literature into the historical, cultural, theological, intellectual, and material contexts. That's a tall order. But like those we read who endure heroically, so shall we: we will be able to by semester's end read Old English literature in Old English, both prose and poetry. The approach is simple. This is an intensive course, a full 15 week course offered over less than 8 weeks in Summer delivered over D2L and the Internet. This means that the student will need to keep up and plan well. Missing some elements of the course will prevent successful completion. We will cover approximately two chapters a week, and during the last couple of weeks we will be working exclusively in translating Old English texts. This will require a serious commitment on the part of the student as well as the instructor. Textbooks: Reading Old English: An Introduction by Robert Hasenfratz and Thomas Jambeck A History of Old English Literature by Michael Alexander Recommended: The Anglo-Saxons James Campbell Larry Swain lswain@bemidjistate.edu