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Apostolic discourse and Christian identity in Anglo-Saxon literature

Posted on:2011-12-03Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignCandidate:Godlove, Shannon NycoleFull Text:PDF
GTID:1445390002956207Subject:Literature
Abstract/Summary:
“Apostolic Discourse and Christian Identity in Anglo-Saxon Literature” argues that Anglo-Saxon religious writers used traditions about the apostles to inspire and interpret their peoples’ own missionary ambitions abroad, to represent England itself as a center of religious authority, and to articulate a particular conception of inspired authorship. This study traces the formation and adaptation of apostolic discourse (a shared but evolving language based on biblical and literary models) through a series of Latin and vernacular works including the letters of Boniface, the early vitae of the Anglo-Saxon missionary saints, the Old English poetry of Cynewulf, and the anonymous poem Andreas. This study demonstrates how Anglo-Saxon authors appropriated the experiences and the authority of the apostles to fashion Christian identities for members of the emerging English church in the seventh and eighth centuries, and for vernacular religious poets and their readers in the later Anglo-Saxon period.
Keywords/Search Tags:Poem
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