'Displays a wealth of scholarship.'
Michael Swanton, Times Educational Supplement 25 Nov 1977

'Many first-rate contributions to the study of the poem.'
Robert T. Farrell, Review of English Studies 29 (1978)

‘A fine piece of work.'
J.R. Hall, Year's Work in Old English Studies - 1977 in Old English Newsletter 12 (1978)

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'It is not too large a claim to say that ultimately . . . English poetic criticism and appreciation as a whole will benefit from Dr Lucas's careful and scholarly work.'
D.G. Scragg in Critical Quartely 20 (1978)

'In many respects exemplary as an edition of an Old English poem.'
D. Jost in Speculum 54 (1979)

'Twenty-six years after his second, revised edition of the Old English poem Exodus, Peter J. Lucas supplies a welcome third edition of this important text [...] the edition provides not only an excellent introduction to the text and important aspects of the study of Old English literature in general to the student ‘beginner’ but will remain a staple on any Old English scholar’s bookshelf."Judith Kaup, Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen

Exodus is an exceptional Old English poem, written at a time when in the age of Bede Northern England held the intellectual leadership of Europe. It offers a vernacular gateway to the study of early medieval christian poetry. Focussing in dramatic fashion on the crossing of the Red Sea enabling the Israelites to escape captivity in Egypt the poem is stylistically outstanding, showing a use of metaphor and fusion of disparate concepts (such as abstract and concrete, literal and allegorical) unparalleled in Old English poetry. The exodus, the greatest of Old Testament events, is interpreted both within the historical perspective of other Old Testament events (the Deluge and the Offering of Isaac) and within the allegorical perspective of the exodus to the Promised Land seen as the christian's journey through life to the ultimate heavenly home. This book, now in its third edition, aims to make the poem more accessible, and better understood and appreciated than hitherto. A number of changes to the Introduction, Commentary and Glossary, as well as a new Select Bibliography, help to bring the apparatus up to date and draw attention to the many fine contributions to the poem made by other scholars.
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PrefaceList of AbbreviationsIntroductionI THE MANUSCRIPT1. History, Provenance and Origin2. General Description3. Sectional Divisions4. Lay-out and Lacunae5. The Intended Illustrations6. Punctuation7. Scribal Error8. Compilation9. The Textual Integrity of Exodus10. The Corrector's AccentsII LANGUAGEIII METREIV STYLEV SOURCESVI THEMEVII DATE AND ORIGINThe TextEDITORIAL PROCEDUREEXODUS: Text with textual notes and CommentarySelect BibliographyGlossaryGlossorial Index of People and Places
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The acclaimed EMTS series makes a significant contribution to modern scholarship in the field of medieval and early Tudor studies by publishing high-quality new or revised scholarly editions and translations of important texts, and by making available critical and contextual studies by leading scholars in the field.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781789621464
Publisert
2020-05-08
Utgave
3. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Liverpool University Press
Høyde
190 mm
Bredde
128 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Redaktør

Biographical note

Peter J. Lucas is presently Honorary Research Associate at the Department of Anglo-Saxon Norse and Celtic in the University of Cambridge, and is Emeritus Professor of Old and Middle English at University College Dublin, where he taught English Language and Medieval English Literature. He is the author of several books, including the facsimile edition of Franciscus Junius’s Cædmonis Monachi Paraphrasis Poetica Genesios, originally published in 1655 (Amsterdam, 2000), which includes the first edition ever of the Old English Exodus. Other books include From Author to Audience: John Capgrave and Medieval Publication (Dublin 1997), and The Medieval Manuscripts at Maynooth: Explorations in the Unknown, with Angela M. Lucas (Dublin, 2014), as well as several volumes in the series Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts in Microfiche Facsimile. He has also written ninety or so articles on Old and Middle English, the history of the English language, and the early printing of Anglo-Saxon.