Undoing Babel: The Tower of Babel in Anglo-Saxon Literature

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The Tower of Babel narrative is one of the most memorable accounts of the Bible, and its interpretative potential has produced a vast array of literary adaptations. "Undoing Babel" is the first extensive examination of the development of the Babel narrative amongst Anglo-Saxon authors from late antiquity to the eleventh century. Tristan Major’s illuminating and original insight into Anglo-Latin and Old English works, including the writings of Aldhelm, Bede, Alcuin, Ælfric, and Wulfstan, reveals the cultural ideologies and anxieties that transformed the Babel narrative. In doing so, Major argues that these Babel narratives provide a basis for understanding the world’s ethnic and linguistic diversity as well as a theological stimulus to evangelize non-Christian and non-European people. "Undoing Babel" highlights the depth of literary innovation in this period and disproves any notion of a single Anglo-Saxon reception of biblical sources.

Author(s): Tristan Major
Series: Toronto Anglo-Saxon Series, 25
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Year: 2018

Language: English
Pages: 306

Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Genesis 10–11
Introduction
1. Early Jewish and Christian Antiquity
2. Latin Christian Antiquity
3. The Early Anglo-Saxon School at Canterbury
4. Bede and Alcuin
5. Alfred the Great and the Literature of His Reign
6. The Tenth and Early Eleventh Centuries
7. The Biblical Poems of Junius 11
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index