Anxiety in the Old Germanic Life: A Review of Anglo- Saxon Heroic Literature

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Fatima Zahra Bessedik

Abstract

This essay tends to discuss anxiety as a feature of Anglo-Saxon culture. It considers three Old English poems: The Battle of Maldon, The Battle of Brunanburh, and Juliana. Using textual analyses and psychoanalytic theory, the study argues that Anglo-Saxon culture is inherently savage. The analyses demonstrate how Anglo-Saxon ethics idealize tragic heroism and glorify battle. Finally, the study delves on the image of the monster as a metaphor of the Old Germanic unconscious. By reading the image of the demon in Cynewulf’s Juliana, the study considers the appearance of the devil as a reflection of the Anglo- Saxon obsession with fear. I argue that the poem, by representing the Devil, ultimately denounces the Anglo- Saxon warrior ethics.

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How to Cite
Bessedik, F. Z. (2018). Anxiety in the Old Germanic Life: A Review of Anglo- Saxon Heroic Literature . Traduction Et Langues, 17(1), 17-23. https://doi.org/10.52919/translang.v17i1.555
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