Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: In principio: The Queer Matrix of Gender, Time and Memory in the Middle Ages
- 1 The Pitfalls of Linear Time: Using the Medieval Female Life-Cycle as an Organizing Strategy
- 2 Medieval Expiration Dating? Queer Time and Spatial Dislocation in Aucassin et Nicolette
- 3 Remembering Birth in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England
- 4 ‘Ides gnornode/geomrode giddum’: Remembering the Role of a friðusibb in the Retelling of the Fight at Finnsburg in Beowulf
- 5 Remembrance and Time in the Wooing Group
- 6 Gendered Strategies of Time and Memory in the Writing of Julian of Norwich and the Recluse of Winchester
- 7 Gendered Discourses of Time and Memory in the Cult and Hagiography of William of Norwich
- 8 Re-membering Saintly Relocations: The Rewriting of Saint Congar’s Life within the Gendered Context of Romance Narratives
- 9 A Man Out of Time: Joseph, Time and Space in the N-Town Marian Plays
- 10 Dismembering Gender and Age: Replication, Rebirth and Remembering in The Phoenix
- Bibliography
- Index
4 - ‘Ides gnornode/geomrode giddum’: Remembering the Role of a friðusibb in the Retelling of the Fight at Finnsburg in Beowulf
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: In principio: The Queer Matrix of Gender, Time and Memory in the Middle Ages
- 1 The Pitfalls of Linear Time: Using the Medieval Female Life-Cycle as an Organizing Strategy
- 2 Medieval Expiration Dating? Queer Time and Spatial Dislocation in Aucassin et Nicolette
- 3 Remembering Birth in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England
- 4 ‘Ides gnornode/geomrode giddum’: Remembering the Role of a friðusibb in the Retelling of the Fight at Finnsburg in Beowulf
- 5 Remembrance and Time in the Wooing Group
- 6 Gendered Strategies of Time and Memory in the Writing of Julian of Norwich and the Recluse of Winchester
- 7 Gendered Discourses of Time and Memory in the Cult and Hagiography of William of Norwich
- 8 Re-membering Saintly Relocations: The Rewriting of Saint Congar’s Life within the Gendered Context of Romance Narratives
- 9 A Man Out of Time: Joseph, Time and Space in the N-Town Marian Plays
- 10 Dismembering Gender and Age: Replication, Rebirth and Remembering in The Phoenix
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Old English poem Beowulf is about memory. The poem is found in the late-tenth-century MS BL Cotton Vitellius A.XV manuscript and is set in the sixth-century Scandinavian homelands from where the people who became the Anglo-Saxons had migrated in the fifth century. It is a cultural myth, a remembered story which endures because it continues to exert a hold over people’s imagination in its continuing capacity to absorb and interpret experience. As Nicholas Howe writes, ‘[a]s it survives organically within a culture and inspires its imaginative works, this myth testifies to the belief that the past can shape the present and, by extension, the future.’
The tradition of transmitting stories of the past through oral poetry was important for an early society with no written records. Indeed, it provided continuity, a way for people to understand themselves against those who had gone before them. It gave them models for the organization of their society and a benchmark by which to live: a benchmark which Matthew Innes terms ‘an image of an ideal order, a Golden Age against which the present could be judged’. Howe also interprets this as ‘an account of that ancestral past which, despite any evidence to the contrary, gives a group its irreducible common identity’. The very act of passing on this story/history was in itself an act of memory by the scops [poets], who undertook the responsibility of remembering and transmitting their society’s identity through time, complete with successes and failures. Whilst transmitting this memory, they also had the opportunity, consciously or subconsciously, to add their own agenda and interpretation with the changing times. As memory is by its very nature organic and subjective, each time a memory is transmitted, there is a possibility that it may be given a subjective slant capable of being used to change the way society reacts to events from its past and its present. In the context of Beowulf, that memory, therefore, would acquire some stability only when written down; even then, with each copy made there may have been subtle changes. As this is the only extant version of the poem, however, we have no way of comparing it to others.
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- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015