What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf

Stories which are set apart from the surrounding discourse, contain sufficient detail to engage the audience, have recognisable characters, and have a discernible point may also have the power to effect change by influencing their audiences. The purpose of this thesis is twofold: to develop a metho...

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Main Author: Venables, Melissa J.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56456/
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author Venables, Melissa J.
author_facet Venables, Melissa J.
author_sort Venables, Melissa J.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Stories which are set apart from the surrounding discourse, contain sufficient detail to engage the audience, have recognisable characters, and have a discernible point may also have the power to effect change by influencing their audiences. The purpose of this thesis is twofold: to develop a methodology that approaches stories in a way that acknowledges this power to act, and to test whether Old English narratives can be approached in this way by applying the methodology to Beowulf. The first section draws on socio-narratological theory to describe social dimension of stories by describing their powerful aspects, including flexibility, multiplicity, intertextuality, emplotment, interpellation, identity formation, and magic. This underpins the analytical framework designed to identify embedded narratives, determine whether they conform to the specialised definition of story described above, and identify the core point or points of the story. The framework emphasises the layers of evaluation in the story as an indicator of a given narrative’s central point. The second section provides a new reading of Beowulf centred on the questions 'Which, if any, of the aspects of story does the narrative exhibit?' and 'What is the most evaluated aspect of the story?' Of the forty-one narratives embedded in the poem, four groups have been selected as case studies: the Unferþ episode, the Finn episode and The Fight at Finnsburh, stories Beowulf tells about women, and the rest of the stories told by Beowulf. The case studies show that the methodology can be used to shed new light on a medieval text. Beowulf exhibits many of the aspects of narrative described in the first part, and it is clear that it was composed with the social dimension of stories in mind.
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spelling nottingham-564562025-02-28T14:28:26Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56456/ What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf Venables, Melissa J. Stories which are set apart from the surrounding discourse, contain sufficient detail to engage the audience, have recognisable characters, and have a discernible point may also have the power to effect change by influencing their audiences. The purpose of this thesis is twofold: to develop a methodology that approaches stories in a way that acknowledges this power to act, and to test whether Old English narratives can be approached in this way by applying the methodology to Beowulf. The first section draws on socio-narratological theory to describe social dimension of stories by describing their powerful aspects, including flexibility, multiplicity, intertextuality, emplotment, interpellation, identity formation, and magic. This underpins the analytical framework designed to identify embedded narratives, determine whether they conform to the specialised definition of story described above, and identify the core point or points of the story. The framework emphasises the layers of evaluation in the story as an indicator of a given narrative’s central point. The second section provides a new reading of Beowulf centred on the questions 'Which, if any, of the aspects of story does the narrative exhibit?' and 'What is the most evaluated aspect of the story?' Of the forty-one narratives embedded in the poem, four groups have been selected as case studies: the Unferþ episode, the Finn episode and The Fight at Finnsburh, stories Beowulf tells about women, and the rest of the stories told by Beowulf. The case studies show that the methodology can be used to shed new light on a medieval text. Beowulf exhibits many of the aspects of narrative described in the first part, and it is clear that it was composed with the social dimension of stories in mind. 2019-07-22 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56456/1/M%20Venables%204115605%20Storytelling%20in%20Beowulf.pdf Venables, Melissa J. (2019) What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. storytelling narrrative Beowulf
spellingShingle storytelling
narrrative
Beowulf
Venables, Melissa J.
What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf
title What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf
title_full What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf
title_fullStr What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf
title_full_unstemmed What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf
title_short What’s the Point: Storytelling in Beowulf
title_sort what’s the point: storytelling in beowulf
topic storytelling
narrrative
Beowulf
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56456/