Literary Speech Acts of the Medieval North
Essays Inspired by the Works of Thomas A. Shippey
9780866986106
Distributed for ACMRS Press
Literary Speech Acts of the Medieval North
Essays Inspired by the Works of Thomas A. Shippey
This volume brings together examinations of pragmatic meaning and proverbs of the Medieval North. Pragmatic meaning, which relies upon cultural and interpersonal context to go beyond the simple semantic and grammatical meaning of an utterance, has a fundamental connection with proverbs, which also communicate a deeper meaning than what is actually said. Essays in this volume explore this connection by examining the language of generosity, conversion, friendship, debate, dragon proverbs, and saints’ lives. These essays are inspired by the works of Thomas A. Shippey, who has been a pioneer in the study of wisdom poetry and pragmatics in medieval literature.
265 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2020
Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies
Literature and Literary Criticism: General Criticism and Critical Theory

Table of Contents
Foreword: An Awareness of Immanence
-Tom Shippey
Preface
-Eric Shane Bryan and Alexander Vaughan Ames
Acknowledgments
-Eric Shane Bryan and Alexander Vaughan Ames
Part I: Proverbial Speech Acts
The Eddic Wisdom of Hreiðarr the Fool: Paroemial Cognitive Patterning in an Old Icelandic þáttr
-Richard L. Harris
Beowulf’s Bane, Fáfnir, and the Firedrake of Erebor: Proverbial Dragons and the Implicatures of Pragmatic Discourse
-Jonathan Evans
Examining The Proverbs of Hendyng for the Essentials: Its Meaning, Authorship, and Readership
-Graham P. Johnson
The Wisdom of Friendship in Hávamál
-Michael Nagy
Competitive Cooperation in Old and Middle English Debate Poetry: Solomon and Saturn II and Winner and Waster
-Alexander Vaughan Ames
Part II: Pragmatic Speech Acts
Don’t Kill the Messenger: Felicity Conditions in Old Norse Conversion Narratives
-Eric Shane Bryan
Repetition, Class, and the Nameless Speakers of Beowulf
-Michael R. Kightley
Praising and Appraising Heroic Deeds: Generosity as Surplus Giving in Beowulf
-Scott Gwara
The Fall of the Angels as Apotropaic Weapon in Cynewulf’s Saints’ Lives
-Jill M. Fitzgerald
“Hwæt!”: Discourse Markers and Orality in Beowulf
-Toby R. Beeny
Teaching Good Manners: Civil Discourse Patterns in Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
-A. Keith Kelly
Bibliography
-Tom Shippey
Preface
-Eric Shane Bryan and Alexander Vaughan Ames
Acknowledgments
-Eric Shane Bryan and Alexander Vaughan Ames
Part I: Proverbial Speech Acts
The Eddic Wisdom of Hreiðarr the Fool: Paroemial Cognitive Patterning in an Old Icelandic þáttr
-Richard L. Harris
Beowulf’s Bane, Fáfnir, and the Firedrake of Erebor: Proverbial Dragons and the Implicatures of Pragmatic Discourse
-Jonathan Evans
Examining The Proverbs of Hendyng for the Essentials: Its Meaning, Authorship, and Readership
-Graham P. Johnson
The Wisdom of Friendship in Hávamál
-Michael Nagy
Competitive Cooperation in Old and Middle English Debate Poetry: Solomon and Saturn II and Winner and Waster
-Alexander Vaughan Ames
Part II: Pragmatic Speech Acts
Don’t Kill the Messenger: Felicity Conditions in Old Norse Conversion Narratives
-Eric Shane Bryan
Repetition, Class, and the Nameless Speakers of Beowulf
-Michael R. Kightley
Praising and Appraising Heroic Deeds: Generosity as Surplus Giving in Beowulf
-Scott Gwara
The Fall of the Angels as Apotropaic Weapon in Cynewulf’s Saints’ Lives
-Jill M. Fitzgerald
“Hwæt!”: Discourse Markers and Orality in Beowulf
-Toby R. Beeny
Teaching Good Manners: Civil Discourse Patterns in Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
-A. Keith Kelly
Bibliography
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