ÿþ<html><head> <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-16"><link rel=stylesheet type=text/css href=help_style.css><title>Beowulf Bibliography, 1990-2003</title></head> <body bgcolor="white"> <font face="junicode"> <CENTER> <p style="COLOR: #000000; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #DFEBE3"><b><a href="content.htm">Guide</a> | <a href="javascript:self.close()">Close</a></b></p> <p align="center"><b><i>Beowulf</i> Bibliography, 1990-2003</b></p> Adapted with permission from Carl Berkhout s Annual Bibliography </CENTER> <hr><center><a href="#A">A</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#B">B</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#Bi">Bi</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#C">C</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#Cl">Cl</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#D">D</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#E">E</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#F">F</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#G">G</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#H">H</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top35927224">He</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top35983136">I</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36001752">J</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36018240">K</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36085288">L</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36141160">M</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36222720">N</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36266192">O</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36323080">P</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36374880">R</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36473832">S</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36560976">St</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36635104">T</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36710976">V</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36718136">W</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  <a href="#top36763760">Y</a>&nbsp; |&nbsp;  </center> <hr><p> <p><a name="A"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Abraham, Lenore,  The Decorum of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Philological Quarterly</i>&nbsp;  72 (1993): 267-87. </p><p>Aertsen, Henk, Rolf H. Bremmer, Jr., ed. <a name="aertsen"><i>Companion to Old English Poetry </i></a>. Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit Press, 1994. </p><p>Aguirre Dabán, Manuel,  The Phrasal Structure of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>SELIM 1996: Proceedings of the 9th International Conference of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature. </i>Margarita Giménez Bon, Vickie Olsen, ed. Zaragoza: Pórtico, 1997. 8-16. </p><p>________,  Ring-Giver, Hoard-Guardian: Two World Views in Beowulf. <i><a href="#fanego"><i>Papers</i></a>. </i>Fanego Lema, ed. 9-17. </p><p>Aitches, Marian Annette,  <i>Beowulf</i> Myth as a Structural and Thematic Key. Dissertation. University of North Texas. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  51A (1990): 1606. </p><p>Alama, Pauline Julia,  From Curiosity to Canon: Nineteenth-Century Translations of <i>Beowulf</i>. Dissertation. University of Rochester. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>   59A (1999): 3463. </p><p>Alexander, Michael, ed. <i>Beowulf. </i>London: Penguin, 1995. </p><p>________, <i>Beowulf: A Verse Translation. </i>Revised London, etc.: Penguin, 2001. </p><p>Albano, Robert A.,  The Role of Women in Anglo-Saxon Culture: Hildeburh in <i>Beowulf</i> and a Curious Counterpart in the <i>Volsunga Saga</i>. <i>English Language Notes</i>&nbsp;  32 (1994): 1-10. </p><p>Alfano, Christine,  The Issue of Feminine Monstrosity: a Reevaluation of Grendel s Mother. <i>Comitatus</i>&nbsp;  23 (1992): 1-16. </p><p>Altman, Rochelle Ida,  An Application and a Text: Electronic Research Diplomatic Editions for Computers in the Humanities. Dissertation. Arizona State University. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  56A (1996): 4594. </p><p>Amodio, Mark C.,  Affective Criticism, Oral Poetics, and Beowulf s Fight with the Dragon. <i>Oral Tradition</i>&nbsp;  10 (1995): 54-90. </p><p>Anderson, Carolyn,  Gæst, Gender, and Kin in <i>Beowulf</i> Consumption of Boundaries. <i>Heroic Age</i>   5 (Summer/Autumn 2001): n.p.. </p><p>Andersson, Theodore M.,  Sources and Analogues. <a href="#bjork"><i>A Beowulf Handbook. </i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 125-48. </p><p>Atherton, Mark,  The Figure of the Archer in <i>Beowulf</i> and the Anglo-Saxon Psalter. <i>Neophilologus</i>&nbsp;  77 (1993): 653-57. </p> <p><a name="B"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Baker, Peter S., ed. <a name="baker"><i>Beowulf: Basic Readings. </i></a> Basic Readings in Anglo-Saxon England, 1. New York and London: Garland, 1995. </p><p>________,  The Reader, the , and the Electronic Critical Edition. <i>A Guide to Editing Middle English. </i>Vincent P. McCarren, Douglas Moffat, ed. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998. 263-283. </p><p>________, Nicholas Howe, <a name="howe"><i>Words and Works: Studies in Medieval English Language and Literature in Honour of Fred C. Robinson. </i></a>. Toronto, Buffalo and London: University of Toronto Press, 1998. </p><p>Bammesberger, Alfred,  Further Thoughts on <i>Beowulf</i> line 1537a: <i>gefeng þa be [f]leaxe</i>. <i>Notes and Queries</i>   48 (2001): 3-4. </p><p>________,  The Half-Line <i>þenden hyt sy</i> (<i>Beowulf</i> 2649b). <i>ANQ</i>&nbsp;  (formerly <i>American Notes and Queries</i>)14 (2001): 3-5. </p><p>________,  The Syntactic Analysis of <i>Beowulf</i> Lines 4-5. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  102 (2001): 131-133. </p><p>________,  Beowulf s Landing in Denmark.. <i>English Studies</i>&nbsp;  81 (2001): 97-9. </p><p>________,  Old English <i>reote</i> in <i>Beowulf</i> line 2457a.. <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  47 (2000): 158-9. </p><p>________,  The Superlative of Old English <i>god</i> in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  101 (2000): 519-21. </p><p>________,  What does <i>he</i> in lines 1392b and 1394b Refer to? <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  47 (2000): 403-5. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i> line 600a: OE <i>sendeþ</i>. <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  46 (1999): 428-30. </p><p>________,  In What Sense Was Grendel an <i>angeng(e)a</i>? <i>Notes &amp; Queries</i>&nbsp;  46 (1999): 173-76. </p><p>________,  The Half-Line <i>freond on frætewum</i> (<i>Beowulf</i> 962a). <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  99 (1998): 237-39. </p><p>________,  The Half-Line <i>Grendeles mægum</i> (<i>Beowulf</i> 2353b). <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  New Series 45 (1998): 2-4. </p><p>________,  The Reading of <i>Beowulf</i> l. 31b. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  99 (1998): 125-29. </p><p>________,  Beowulf s Last Will. <i>English Studies</i>&nbsp;  77 (1996): 305-10. </p><p>________,  The Emendation of <i>Beowulf</i> l. 586. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  97 (1996): 379-82. </p><p>________,  A Textual Note on <i>Beowulf</i> 431-432. <i>English Studies</i>&nbsp;  76 (1995): 297-301. </p><p>________,  Beowulf s Descent into Grendel s Mere. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  96 (1995): 225-27. </p><p>________,  Zu <i>Beowulf</i> 386-394. <i>Anglia</i>&nbsp;  112 (1994): 107-14. </p><p>________,  Five <i>Beowulf</i> Notes. <a href="#korhammer"><i>Words, Texts and Manuscripts</i></a>. Korhammer, ed. 239-55. </p><p>________,  Die Lesart in <i>Beowulf</i> 1382a. <i>Anglia</i>&nbsp;  108 (1990): 314-26. </p><p>________,  The Conclusion of Wealhtheow s Speech (<i>Beowulf</i> 1231). <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  91 (1990): 207-08. </p><p>Barkley, H.,  Tolkien, <i>Beowulf</i> and the Lords of the Ring. <i>Germanic Notes and Reviews</i>&nbsp;  30 (1999): 1-4. </p><p>Barquist, C. R. and D. L. Shie,  Computer Analysis of Alliteration in <i>Beowulf</i> Using Distinctive Feature Theory. <i>Literary and Linguistic Computing</i>&nbsp;  6 (1991): 274-80. </p><p>Barringer, Bob,  Adding Insult to the Inquiry: a Study of Rhetorical Jousting in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>In Geardagum</i>&nbsp;  19 (1998): 19-26. </p><p>Battaglia, Frank,  <i>Sib</i> in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>In Geardagum</i>&nbsp;  20 (1999): 27-47. </p><p>________,  The Germanic Earth Goddess in <i>Beowulf</i>? <i>Mankind Quarterly</i>&nbsp;  35 (1994): 39-69. </p><p>Bazelmans, Jos, <i>By Weapons Made Worthy: Lords, Retainers, and Their Relationship in Beowulf. </i>Amsterdam Archaeological Studies, 5. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 1999. </p><p>________,  One for All, All for One. The Old English <i>Beowulf</i> and the Ritual and Cosmological Character of the Relationship between Lord and Warrior-Follower in Germanic Societies. <i>Method and Theory in Historical Archaeology. </i>Guy De Boe, Frans Verhaege, ed. Zellik, 1997. 51-53. </p><p>Bennett, Helen,  The Female Mourner at Beowulf s Funeral: Filling in the Blanks / Hearing the Spaces. <i>Exemplaria</i>&nbsp;  4 (1992): 35-50. </p><p>Benson, Larry D., <i>Contradictions: from Beowulf to Chaucer: Selected Studies of Larry D. Benson. </i>Theodore M. Andersson, Stephen A. Barney, ed. Aldershot, Hants, and Brookfield, Vermont: Scolar Press, 1995. </p><p>________,  The Pagan Coloring of <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href="#baker"><i>Beowulf Basic Readings</i></a>. Baker, ed. 35-50. </p><p>Berkhout, Carl T.,  Laurence Nowell (1530-ca. 1570). <i>Medieval Scholarship, Bibliographical Studies on the Formation of a Discipline, Volume 2: Literature and Philology. </i>Helen Damico, with Donald Fennema and Karmen Lenz, ed. New York and London: Garland, 1998. 3-17. </p><p>Betancourt, Antonio Luis, <i>Beowulf, Prince of Geatland. </i>Colorado Springs: Dell, 1997. </p> <p><a name="Bi"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Bibere, Paul, <i>Beowulf. </i>British writers, <i>Supplement VI</i>. Jay Parini, ed. New York: Charles Scribner s Sons, 2001. </p><p>Biggs, Frederick M., Thomas D. Hill, Paul E. Szarmach, <i>Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture: a Trial Version. </i>Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 74. Binghamton, NY: SUNY, 1990. </p><p>Bjork, Robert E.,  Digressions and Episodes. <a href="#bjork"><i>A  Beowulf Handbook</i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 193-212. </p><p>________,  Grí­mur Jónsson Thorkelin s Preface to the First Edition of <i>Beowulf</i> 1815. <i>Scandinavian Studies</i>&nbsp;  68 (1996): 291-320. </p><p>________,  Speech as Gift in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Speculum</i>&nbsp;  69 (1994): 993-1022. </p><p>________ and Anita Obermeier,  Date, Provenance, Author, Audiences. <a href="#bjork"><i>A  Beowulf Handbook</i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 13-34. </p><p>Bjork, Robert E. and John D. Niles, ed. <a name="bjork"><i>A  Beowulf Handbook</i></a>. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1997. </p><p>Bliss, Alan, <i>The Scansion of Beowulf. </i>Peter J. Lucas, ed. <i>Old English Newsletter. </i>Subsidia, 22. Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, 1995. </p><p>Blockley, Mary E.,  Apposition and the Subjects of Verb-Initial Clauses. <a href="#howe"><i>Words and Works</i></a>. Baker and Howe, ed. 173-86. </p><p>________,  Klaeber s Relineations of <i>Beowulf</i> and Verses Ending in Words without Categorical Stress. <i>Review of English Studies</i>&nbsp;  46 (1995): 321-32. </p><p>________,  Perfecting the Old English Past: <i>Beowulf</i> 2 and Limits on the Equivalence of the Old English Simple Past and Present Perfect. <i>Philological Quarterly</i>&nbsp;  70 (1991): 123-39. </p><p>________ and Thomas Cable,  Kuhn s Laws, Old English Poetry, and the New Philology. <a href="#baker"><i>Beowulf: Basic Readings</i></a>. Baker, ed. 261-79. </p><p>Bloom, Harold, ed. <i>Beowulf: Modern Critical Interpretations. </i>New York: Chelsea House, 1987. </p><p>Bloomfield, Josephine,  Benevolent Authoritarianism in Klaeber s <i>Beowulf</i> an ial Translation of Kingship. <i>Modern Language Quarterly</i>&nbsp;  60 (1999): 129-59. </p><p>________,  Diminished by Kindness: Frederick Klaeber s Rewriting of Wealhtheow. <i>Journal of English and Germanic Philology</i>&nbsp;  93 (1994): 183-203. </p><p>Boenig, Robert,  Musical Instruments as Iconographical Artifacts in Medieval Poetry. <i>Material Culture and Cultural Materialisms in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. </i>Curtis Perry, ed. Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, 5. Turnhout: Brepols, 2001. 1-15. </p><p>________,  Very Sharp/Unsharp, Unpeace/ Firm Peace: Morphemic Ambiguity in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Neophilologus</i>&nbsp;  76 (1992): 275-82. </p><p>Booth, Paul Anthony,  King Alfred versus Beowulf: the Reeducation of the Anglo-Saxon Aristocracy. <i>Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester</i>&nbsp;  79.3 (1997): 41-66. </p><p>Borges, Jorge Luis,  Written in a Copy of the Geste of <i>Beowulf</i>. R. G. Barnes, <i>Poetry</i>&nbsp;  162 (1993): 159. [poem]</p><p>Borroff, Marie,  Systematic Sound Symbolism in the Long Alliterative Line in <i>Beowulf</i><i>Sir Gawain</i>. <i>English Historical Metrics. </i>McCully and Anderson, ed. 120-33. </p><p>Boyle, Leonard E.,  The Nowell Codex and the Dating of <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href="#chase"><i>Dating of Beowulf</i></a>. Chase, ed. 23-32. </p><p>Bravo Garcí­a, Antonio,  Las fórmulas verbales en la épica anglosajona y castellana: un estudio contrastivo. <i>Homenaje a Álvaro Galmés de Fuentes. </i>Ana M. Cano Gonzáles, et al., ed. Oviedo and Madrid, 1985-87. II. 39-47. </p><p>Breeze, Andrew,  <i>Beowulf</i>, <i>The Battle of Maldon</i>: <i>trem</i>  pace and Welsh <i>tremyn</i>  journey . <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  40 (1993): 9-10. </p><p>________,  <i>Wered</i>  sweet drink at <i>Beowulf</i> 496: Welsh <i>gwirod</i>  liquor, drink . <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  40 (1993): 433-34. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i> 875-902 and the Sculptures at Sangüesa, Spain. <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  38 (1991): 2-13. ill.</p><p>Breizmann, Natalia,  Beowulf as Romance: Literary Interpretation as Quest. <i>Modern Language Notes</i>&nbsp;  113 (1998): 1022-35. </p><p>Bremmer, Rolf H., Jr.,  Grendel s Arm and the Law. <i>Studies in English Language and Literature. </i>Toswell and Tyler, ed. 121-32. </p><p>________, Jan van den Ber, and David F. Johnson, <i>Notes on Beowulf. </i>Leeds: Leeds Studies in English, 1991. </p><p>Bruce, Alexander Martin and Paul E. Szarmach, <i>Scyld and Scef: Expanding the Analogues. </i>New York: Garland Publications, 2002. </p><p>Bruce, Alexander Martin,  An Education in the Mead-Hall: <i>Beowulf</i> s Lessons for Young Warriors. <i>Heroic Age</i>&nbsp;  5 (Summer/Autumn 2001): n.p.. </p><p>________,  The Figure of Scyld Scefing. Dissertation. University of Georgia. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  58A (1997): 2200. </p><p>Brunetti, Giuseppe,  Il Beowulf in inglese moderno. <i>Testo medievale e traduzione. </i>Cammarota and Molinari, ed. 93-101. </p><p>________,  Il <i>Beowulf</i> in inglese moderno: traduzioni dal 1940 al 1990. <i>Teoria e pratica della traduzione nel medioevo germanico. </i>Maria Vittoria, et al., ed. Padua: Unipress, 1994. 139-58. </p> <p><a name="C"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Cable, Thomas,  Clashing Stress in the Metres of Old, Middle, and Renaissance English. <i>English Historical Metrics. </i>McCully and Anderson, ed. 7-29. </p><p>________,  Type D Verses as Evidence for the Rhythmic Basis of Old English Meter. <a href="#damico"><i>Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period</i></a>. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 157-70. </p><p>Cain, Christopher M.,  <i>Beowulf</i> the Old Testament, and the <i>Regula Fidei</i>. <i>Renascence</i>&nbsp;  49 (1997): 227-40. </p><p>Carroll, Joseph,  The Prose <i>Edda</i> the <i>Heimskringla</i> and <i>Beowulf</i> Mythical, Legendary, and Historical Dialogues. <i>In Geardagum</i>&nbsp;  18 (1997): 15-38. </p><p>Carruthers, Leo, <i>Beowulf. </i>Paris: Didier, 1998. </p><p>________, ed. <i>Heroes and Heroines in Medieval English Literature. </i>Cambridge: Brewer, 1994. </p><p>________,  Kingship and Heroism in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i><i>Heroes and Heroines</i>. </i>Carruthers, ed. 19-29. </p><p>Carsley, Catherine A.,  Reassessing Cultural Memory in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Assays</i>&nbsp;  7 (1992): 31-41. </p><p>Carter, Richard,  The Electronic <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Humanities</i>&nbsp;  20.2 (1999): 23. </p><p>Cavill, Paul,  <i>Beowulf</i><i>Andreas</i> Two Maxims. <i>Neophilologus</i>&nbsp;  77 (1993): 479-87. </p><p>Cermák, Jan,  <i>A Prow in Foam</i> The Old English bahuvrihi Compound as a Poetic Device. <i>Prague Studies in English</i>&nbsp;  (Charles Univ.)22 (2000 for 1997): 13-31. </p><p>________,  <i>Hie dygel lond warigeaþ</i> Spatial Imagery in Five <i>Beowulf</i> Compounds. <i>Linguistica Pragensia</i>&nbsp;  1 (1996): 24-34. </p><p>________,  Beowulf 566: What Ebbing Waves Would Leave. <i>Brno Studies in English</i>&nbsp;  19 (1991): 45-53. </p><p>Chance, Jane,  The Structural Unity of <i>Beowulf</i> The Problem of Grendel s Mother. <i>New Readings on Women in Old English Literature. </i>Helen Damico, Alexandra Hennessey Olsen, ed. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1990. 248-61. </p><p>Chase, Colin, ed. <a name="chase"><i>The Dating of Beowulf</i></a>. Toronto Old English Series, 6. Toronto, Buffalo, and London: University of Toronto Press, 1997. [reprint of 1981 edition with afterword by Nicholas Howe,  The Uses of Uncertainty: On the Dating of Beowulf. 213-22. ]</p><p>Chase, Colin,  Opinons on the Date of Beowulf, 1815-1980.. <a href="#chase"><i>The Dating of Beowulf</i></a>. Colin Chase, ed. 3-8. </p><p>________,  Saints Lives, Royal Lives, and the Date of <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href="#chase"><i>The Dating of Beowulf</i></a>. Colin Chase, ed. 161-71. </p><p>________,  Beowulf, Bede, and St. Oswine: The Hero s Pride in Old English Hagiography. <a href="#baker"><i>Beowulf Basic Readings </i></a>. Baker, ed. 181-93. </p><p>Cherniss, Michael D.,   Beowulf Was Not There : Compositional Implications of <i>Beowulf</i> Lines 1299b-1301. <i>Oral Tradition</i>&nbsp;  4 (1989): 316-29. </p><p>Chickering, Howell,  Lyric Time in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Journal of English and Germanic Philology</i>&nbsp;  91 (1992): 489-509. </p><p>Chocheyras, Jacques,  Les légendes épiques du Danemark (VIIIe - Xe siècles) et les origines de la chanson de geste. <i>Olifant</i>&nbsp;  18 (1993-94): 289-302. </p><p>Clark, Francelia Mason, <i>Theme in Oral Epic and in Beowulf. </i>New York and London: Garland, 1995. </p> <p><a name="Cl"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Clark, George,  The Hero and the Theme. <a href="#bjork"><i>A Beowulf Handbook</i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 271-90. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i> the Last Word. <a href="#hall"><i>Old English and New</i></a>. Hall, et al., ed. 15-30. </p><p>________, <i>Beowulf. </i>Twayne s English Authors Series, 477. Boston: Twayne, 1990</p><p>Clemoes, Peter,  Style as a Criterion for Dating the Composition of <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href=#chase"><i>Dating of Beowulf</i></a>. Chase, ed. 173-85. </p><p>Clover, Carol J,  The Germanic Context of the Unferth Episode. <a href="#baker"><i>Beowulf: Basic Readings </i></a>. Baker, ed. 127-54. </p><p>Cohen, Jeffrey J.,  The Use of Monsters and the Middle Ages. <i>SELIM: Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature</i>&nbsp;  2 (1992): 47-69. </p><p>Conner, Patrick W.,  The <i>Beowulf</i> Workstation: One Model of Computer-Assisted Literary Pedagogy. <i>Literary and Linguistic Computing</i>&nbsp;  6 (1991): Special Issue on Computers and Medieval Studies (Edited by Marilyn Deegan with Andrew Armour and Mark Infusino),50-58. </p><p>Cooper, David L.,  Attractor Dynamics in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Linguistic Attractors: the Cognitive Dynamics of Language Acquisition and Change. </i>Human Cognitive Processing, 2. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1999. 206-41</p><p>Cosijn, P. J., <i>Notes on Beowulf. </i>Rolf H. Bremmer Jr., Jan van den Berg, David F. Johnson, ed. and trans.Leeds Texts and Monographs, 12. Leeds: Leeds Studies in English and Kindred Languages, University of Leeds, 1991. </p><p>Cramp, Rosemary,  The Hall in <i>Beowulf</i> and in Archaeology. <a href="#damico"><i>Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period</i></a>. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 331-46. </p><p>Creed, Robert Payson,  <i>The Battle of Maldon</i> and Beowulfian Prosody. <i><i>Prosody and Poetics</i>. </i>Toswell, ed. 23-41. </p><p>________,  Between the Lines: Subdominant-to-Dominant Patterning in <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href="#damico"><i>Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period</i></a>. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 227-46. </p><p>________,  Sutton Hoo and the Recording of <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href="#kendall"><i>Voyage to the Other World</i>. </a> Kendall and Wells, ed. 65-75. ill.</p><p>________,  The Archetypal Verse Line in  Caedmon s Hymn and <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href="#hall"><i>Old English and New</i>. </a> Hall, et al., ed. 31-45. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i> s Fourth Act. <a href="#foley"><i>De Gustibus</i> </a>. Foley, ed. 85-109. </p><p>________, <i>Reconstructing the Rhythm of Beowulf. </i>Columbia and London: University of Missouri Press, 1990. </p><p>Crépin, André,  Beowulf: monstre ou modèle? <i>Études anglaises</i>&nbsp;  51 (1998): 387-98. </p><p>________,  The Names of God in <i>Beowulf</i> An Inquiry into Old English Poetics. <i>Language and Civilization: A Concerted Profusion of Essays and Studies in Honor of Otto Hietsch. </i>Claudia Blank, ed. 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[Continued in the online <a href="http://spirit.lib.uconn.edu/Medieval/beowulf.html"><itl>Beowulf</itl> Bibliography 1979-1994</a> without annotations.]</p><p>________,  The Theme of the  Penitent Damned and Its Relation to <i>Beowulf</i><i>Christ and Satan</i>. <i>Leeds Studies in English and Kindred Languages</i>&nbsp;  New Series 21 (1990): 45-69. </p><p>Hawkins, Emma B.,  Hild and Gu: the War Maidens of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>In Geardagum</i>&nbsp;  15 (1994): 55-75. </p> <p><a name="top35927224"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Heaney, Seamus, trans. <i>Beowulf. </i>London: Faber, 1999. </p><p>_______,  The Drag of the Golden Chain. <i>Times Literary Supplement</i>&nbsp;  (12 November 1999): 14-16. </p><p>________,  The Last Survivor. <i>Times Literary Supplement</i>&nbsp;  (14 November 1997): 13</p><p>________,  The Funeral of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Times Literary Supplement</i>&nbsp;  (19 September 1997): 4. </p><p>________, trans.  The Welcome to Denmark. <i>The Literary Man: Essays Presented to Donald W. Hannah. </i>Karl-Heinz Westarp, ed. Aarhus, 1996. 7-8. </p><p>________,  Exile Runes: from <i>Beowulf</i> Lines 1117-40. <i>London Review of Books</i>&nbsp;  (21 September 1995): 8. </p><p>Herschend, Frands,  Beowulf and St. Sabas: the Tension between the Individual and the Collective in Germanic Society Around 500 A.D.. <i>Tor: tidskrift för arkeologi</i>&nbsp;  24 (1992): 145-64. </p><p>Hieatt, Constance B.,  Beowulf s Last Words vs. Bothvar Bjarki s: How the Hero Faces His God. <a href="#damico"><i>Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period</i></a>. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 403-24. </p><p>Hill, John M.,  The Ethnopsychology of In-law Feud and the Remaking of Group Identity in <i>Beowulf</i> The Cases of Hengest and Ingeld.. <i>Philological Quarterly</i>&nbsp;  78 (1999): 97-124. </p><p>________,  Social Milieu. <a href="#bjork"><i>A Beowulf Handbook </i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 255-69. </p><p>________, <i>The Cultural World in Beowulf. </i>Anthropological Horizons, 6. Toronto, Buffalo, and London: University of Toronto Press, 1995. </p><p>________,  Hrothgar s Noble Rule: Love and the Great Legislator. <i>Social Approaches to Viking Studies. </i>Ross Samson, ed. Glasgow: Cruithne Press, 1991. 169-78. </p><p>Hill, Thomas D.,  The Christian Language and Theme of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Companion to Old English Poetry. </i>Aetsen and Bremmer, ed. 63-77. </p><p>________,  Wealhtheow as a Foreign Slave: Some Critical Analogues. <i>Philological Quarterly</i>&nbsp;  69 (1990): 106-12. </p><p>________,  Beowulf as <i>Seldguma</i><i>Beowulf</i> lines 247-51. <i>Neophilologus</i>&nbsp;  74 (1990): 637-39. </p><p>Hills, Catherine M.,  <i>Beowulf</i> and Archaeology. <a href="#bjork"><i>A Beowulf Handbook</i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 291-310. </p><p>Hock, Hans Henrich,  On the Origin and Development of Relative Clauses in Early Germanic, with Special Emphasis on <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Stæfcræft: Studies in Germanic Linguistics. </i>Elmer H. Antonsen, Hans Henrich Hock, ed. Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 79. Amsterdam: 1991. 55-89. </p><p>Hodges, Kenneth,  <i>Beowulf</i> s Shoulder Pin and <i>wið earm gesæt</i>. <i>English Language Notes</i>&nbsp;  34.3 (1997): 4-10. </p><p>Horner, Shari,  Voices from the margins: women and textual enclosure in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>The Discourse of Enclosure: Representing Women in Old English Literature. </i>SUNY Series in Medieval Studies, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2001. </p><p>Howard, Patricia J.,  Irony of Fate in Cecelia Holland s <i>Two Ravens</i> Echoes of <i>Beowulf</i> and Icelandic Saga. <i>The Comparatist</i>&nbsp;  14 (1990): 15-25. </p><p>Howlett, D. R.,  New Criteria for Editing <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>The Editing of Old English: Papers from the 1990 Manchester Conference. </i>D. C. Scragg, Paul E. Szarmach, ed. Cambridge: Brewer, 1994. 69-84. </p><p>Hubert, Susan J.,  The Case for Emendation of <i>Beowulf</i> 250b. <i>In Geardagum</i>&nbsp;  19 (1998): 51-54. </p><p>Hudson, Marc, <i></i>Beowulf<i> a Translation and Commentary. </i>Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Press, London and Toronto: Associated University Presses, 1990. </p><p>Hutcheson, B. R.,  <i>Beowulf</i> 62: an Impossible Emendation. <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  40 (1993): 3-5. </p><p>________,  The Scansion of Old English Weak Verbs in -<i>ian</i>. <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  38 (1991): 144-46. </p> <p><a name="top35983136"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Iglesias-Rábade, Luis,  <i>Beowulf</i> Some Examples of Binary Structures Traditionally Punctuated as Paratactic Sequences. <i>SELIM: Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature</i>&nbsp;  2 (1992): 6-30. </p><p>Ignoto M. J.,  <i>Beowulf</i><i>Hamlet</i> and Edward DeVere. <i>Shakespeare Oxford Society Newsletter</i>&nbsp;  26.2 (1990): 3-6. </p><p>Irving, Edward B., Jr., <i>A Reading of Beowulf. </i>Revised edition, with preface by Katherine O Brien O Keeffe.Provo, Utah: Chaucer Studio, 1999. </p><p>________,  Christian and Pagan Elements. <a href="#bjork"><i>A Beowulf Handbook. </i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 175-92. </p><p>________, <i>Favorite Passages from  Beowulf </i>. Provo, Utah: Chaucer Studio, 1997. Abridged recording.</p><p>________,  Heroic Worlds:  The Knight s Tale and <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Literature and Religion in the Later Middle Ages: Philological Studies in Honor of Siegfried Wenzel. </i>Richard G. Newhauser, and John A. Alford, ed. Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 118. Binghamton, New York: 1995. 43-59</p><p>________,  Heroic Role-Models: <i>Beowulf</i> and Others. <a href="#damico"><i>Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period</i></a>. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 347-72. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>ANQ </i>(formerly<i> American Notes and Queries</i><i></i>&nbsp;  New Series 3 (1990): 65-69. </p><p>Irwin, Aisling,  <i>Beowulf</i> Treasure Is Find of the Decade. <i>Daily Telegraph</i>&nbsp;  (23 April 1997): 3ill.</p> <p><a name="top36001752"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Jack, George, ed. editor. <i>Beowulf: a Student Edition. </i>Oxford: Clarendon, ; New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. [corrected reprint of 1994 edition]. </p><p>Jensen, S. R., <i>Beowulf and the Swedish Dragon. </i>Sydney: by the author, 1993. </p><p>Jimura, Akiyuki,  A Comparative Study of <i>Beowulf</i> and Yamato Takeru. <i>In Geardagum</i>&nbsp;  14 (1993): 79-87. </p><p>Jin, Koichi,  Emending <i>Beowulf</i> 1333. <i>Medieval English Studies Newsletter</i>&nbsp;  31 (1994): 12-16. </p><p>John, Eric,  <i>Beowulf</i> and the Margins of Literacy. <a href="#baker"><i>Beowulf: Basic Readings </i></a>. Baker, ed. 51-77. </p><p>Johnson, David F.,  The Gregorian Grendl: <i>Beowulf</i> 705B-09 and the Limits of the Demonic. <i>Rome and the North. </i>Bremmer et al., ed. pp. 51-65. </p><p>________, trans. <i>Beowulf and the Monsters: Adapted and Abridged from the Old English Poem, </i>Beowulf<i>. </i>Sydney: Australian RRC, 1997. </p><p>de Jongh, Nicholas,  The Beowulf at Oxford s Door. <i>The Guardian</i>&nbsp;  (18 July 1991): 23</p> <p><a name="top36018240"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Karkov, Catherine and Robert Farrell,  The Gnomic Passages of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  91 (1990): 295-310. </p><p>Karp, Denorah Burstein,  The Preverb <i>ge</i>- in <i>Beowulf</i> Indicator of Resultative Meaning. Dissertation. Columbia University. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  50A (1990): 3216. </p><p>Keddie, James,  Simplifying Resolution in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Prosody and Poetics. </i>Toswell, ed. 80-101. </p><p>Kellogg, Robert L.,  The Context for Epic in Later Anglo-Saxon England. <a href="#damico"><i>Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period</i></a>. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 139-56. </p>Kendall, Calvin B., <i>The Metrical Grammar of Beowulf. </i>Cambridge Studies in Anglo-Saxon England, 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991. ________, and Peter S. Wells, ed. editors. <a name="kendall"><i>Voyage to the Other World: the Legacy of Sutton Hoo</i></a>. Medieval Studies at Minnesota, 5. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1992. Kermode, Frank,  The Geat of Geats.. <i>New York Review</i>&nbsp;  (July 202000. ): 18-21. <p>Kiernan, Kevin, ed., with Andrew Prescott, Elizabeth Solopova, David French, Linda Cantara, Michael Ellis, and Cheng Jiun Yuan, <i>Electronic Beowulf. </i>London: British Library, and Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1999; Rev. ed. <i>Electronic Beowulf 2.0</i>, ed. Kevin Kiernan with Ionut Emil Iacob. London: The British Library, 2004. 2 CD-ROMS</p> <p> ________, and Linda Cantara. <i>Guide to the Electronic Beowulf</i>. London: British Library, and Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1999. Rev. ed. <i>Electronic Beowulf 2.0</i>. London: The British Library, 2004. Online at <a href="http://www.uky.edu/~kiernan/eBeowulf/main.htm">http://www.uky.edu/~kiernan/eBeowulf/main.htm</a>; <i>Guide to the Electronic Beowulf Supplement</i>, <a href="http://www.uky.edu/~kiernan/eBeowulf/ebeosupp.htm">http://www.uky.edu/~kiernan/eBeowulf/ebeosupp.htm</a>. </p></p> <p>________,  The Conybeare-Madden Collation of Thorkelin s <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts and Their Heritage. </i>Phillip Pulsiano, and Elaine Treharne, ed. Aldershot, Hants, England, and Brookfield, Vermont: Ashgate, 1997. 117-136. </p><p>________, <i>Beowulf and the Beowulf Manuscript. </i>Revised edition with foreword by Katherine O Brien O Keeffe.Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996. ill.</p><p>________,  The Electronic <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Computers in Libraries</i>&nbsp;  15.2 (1995): 14-15. ill.</p><p>________,  The Legacy of Wiglaf: Saving a Wounded Beowulf. <a href="#baker"><i>Beowulf: Basic Readings </i></a>. Baker, ed. 195-218. [Revision of 1986 essay]</p><p>________,  Old Manuscripts / New Technologies. <i>Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts: Basic Readings</i>&nbsp;  Mary Richards, ed. New York: Garland, (1994): 37-54. </p><p>________,  The Eleventh-Century Origin of <i>Beowulf</i> and the <i>Beowulf</i> Manuscript. Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts: Basic ReadingsMary Richards, ed. New York: Garland. 1994. 277-299. [Reprinted from 1981 edition of <a href="#chase"><i>The Dating of Beowulf</i></a> editor Chase]</p><p>________,  Opening the Electronic <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Old English Newsletter</i>&nbsp;  27.1 (1993): 35-40. ill.</p><p>________,  Digital Image Processing and the <i>Beowulf</i> Manuscript. <i>Literary and Linguistic Computing</i>&nbsp;  6 (1991): Special Issue on Computers and Medieval Studies (Edited by Marilyn Deegan with Andrew Armour and Mark Infusino, ed. 20-27. ill.</p>________,  A Long Footnote for J. Gerritsen s  supplementary Description of BL Cotton MS Vitellius A. XV. <i>English Studies</i>&nbsp;  72 (1991): 489-96. <p>Kilpiö, Matti,  <i>Beowulf</i> 1763 adl oððe ecg: A corruption of adl oððe ece? <i>Notes &amp; Queries</i>&nbsp;  n.s. 48 (2001): 97-98. </p><p>Kim, Susan Marie,  Monstrous and Bloody Signs: the <i>Beowulf</i> Manuscript. Dissertation. University of Chicago, <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  57A (1996): 2030. </p><p>Klaeber, Friedrich, <i>The Christian Elements in Beowulf</i> Translator Paul Battles, <i>Old English Newsletter</i>&nbsp;  Subsidia, 24. Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute and Rawlinson Center, Western Michigan University, (1996 [1997]): </p><p>Kleinschmidt, Harald,  Architecture and the Dating of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Poetica </i>(Tokyo)<i></i>&nbsp;  34 (1991): 39-56. </p><p>Knowles, JoAnne S.,  The Impact of Christianity and Literacy in Early Anglo-Saxon England: Oral Resistance in <i>Beowulf</i>. Dissertation. Washington State University, <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  57A (1997): 3012. </p><p>Knowlton, Edgar C., Jr., Zacharias P. Thundy, and Andrew Galloway, [Correspondence on 1990 article by Galloway.]<i>Publications of the Modern Language Association</i>&nbsp;  106 (1991): 308-12. </p><p>Köberl, Johann,  Referential Ambiguity as a Structuring Principle in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Neophilologus</i>&nbsp;  79 (1995): 481-95. </p><p>Kolb, Eduard,  Schiff und Seefahrt im <i>Beowulf</i> und im <i>Andreas</i>. <i>Meaning and Beyond: Ernst Leisi zum 70. Geburtstag. </i>Udo Fries, and Martin Heusser, ed. Tübingen, 1989. 237-52. </p><p>Korhammer, Michael, with Karl Reichl, and Hans Sauer, ed. editors. <a name="korhammer"><i>Words, Texts and Manuscripts: Studies in Anglo-Saxon Culture Presented to Helmut Gneuss on the Occasion of His Sixty-Fifth Birthday. </i></a> Woodbridge and Rochester, New York: Brewer, 1992. </p><p>Köberl, Johann,  Referential Ambiguity as a Structuring Principle in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Neophilologus</i>&nbsp;  79 (1995): 481-95. </p> <p><a name="top36085288"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Lane, Lauriat,  A Draft of the First and Last <i>Beowulf</i> Cantos. <i>English Studies in Canada</i>&nbsp;  22 (1996): 337-39. </p><p>Lane, Michael Stephen,  Remembrance of the Past in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>In Geardagum</i>&nbsp;  21 (2000): 41-59. </p><p>Lapidge, Michael,  <i>Beowulf</i> and Perception. <i>Proceedings of the British Academy</i>&nbsp;  111 (2001): 61-97. [Sir Israel Gollancz Memorial Lecture]</p><p>________,  The Archetype of <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Anglo Saxon England</i>&nbsp;  29 (2000): 5-41. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i> and the Psychology of Terror. <a href="#damico"><i>Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period</i></a>. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 373-402. </p><p>Lee, Alvin A., <i>Gold-Hall and Earth-Dragon: <i></i>Beowulf<i></i> as Metaphor. </i> Toronto, Buffalo, and London: University of Toronto Press1998. </p><p>________,  Symbolism and Allegory. <a href="#bjork"><i>A  Beowulf Handbook</i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 233-54. </p><p>________,  Gold-Hall and Earth-Dragon: <i></i>Beowulf<i></i> and  First Phase Language. <i>English Studies in Canada</i>&nbsp;  19 (1993): 201-08. </p><p>Lees, Clare A.,  Men and <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Medieval Masculinities: Regarding Men in the Middle Ages. </i>Lees, ed. Minneapolis and London, 1994. 129-48. </p><p>Lehmann, Ruth P. M.,  Ecgþeow the Wægmunding: Geat or Swede? <i>English Language Notes</i>&nbsp;  31 (1994): 1-5. </p><p>________,  Dawnlight in the Dark Ages. <i>Studia Neophilologica</i>&nbsp;  66 (1994): 175-79. </p><p>Lerer, Seth,  <i></i>Beowulf<i></i> and Contemporary Critical Theory. <a href="#bjork"><i>A  Beowulf Handbook</i></a>. Bjork and Niles, ed. 325-39. </p><p>________,  Grendel s Glove. <i>English Literary History</i>&nbsp;  61 (1994): 721-51. </p><p>Liberman, Anatoly,  The  Icy Ship of Scyld Scefing: <i>Beowulf</i> 33. <i>Bright Is the Ring of Words: Festschrift für Horst Weinstock. </i>Clausdirk Pollner, Helmut Rohlfing, and Frank-Rutger Hausmann, ed. Bonn, 1996. 183-94. </p><p>Lindahl, Carl,  <i>Beowulf</i> Old Law, Internalized Feud. <i>Southern Folklore</i>&nbsp;  53 (1996): 171-91. </p><p>Lionarons, Joyce Tally, <i>The Medieval Dragon: the Nature of the Beast in Germanic Literature. </i>Enfield Lock, Middlesex: Hisarlik, 1998. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i> Myth and Monsters. <i>English Studies</i>&nbsp;  77 (1996): 1-14. </p><p>________,  Bodies, Buildings, and Boundaries: Metaphors of Liminality in Old English and Old Norse Literature. <i>Essays in Medieval Studies</i>&nbsp;  11 (1994): 43-50. </p><p>Liuzza, Roy M., trans. <i>Beowulf. </i>Peterborough, Ontario, and New York: Broadview, 1999. ________,  On the Dating of <i>Beowulf</i>. <a href="#baker"><i> Beowulf : Basic Readings</i></a>. Baker, ed. 281-302. </p><p>Lord, Albert B., <i>The Singer Resumes the Tale. </i>Mary Louise Lord, ed. Ithaca, New York, and London: Cornell University Press, 1995. </p><p>________,  <i>Beowulf</i> and the Russian Byliny. <a href="#foley"><i>De Gustibus</i></a>. Foley, ed. 304-23. </p><p>________, <i>Epic Singers and Oral Traditions. </i>Ithaca, New York, and London: Cornell University Press, 1991. </p><p>Louden, Bruce,  A Narrative Technique in <i>Beowulf</i> and Homeric Epic. <i>Oral Tradition</i>&nbsp;  11 (1996): 346-62. </p><p>Lucas, Peter J.,  <i>Beowulf</i> 224: <i>eolet æt ende</i>. <i>Notes and Queries</i>&nbsp;  37 (1990): 263-64. </p><p>________,  The Place of <i>Judith</i> in the <i>Beowulf</i>-Manuscript. <i>Review of English Studies</i>&nbsp;  41 (1990): 463-78. </p><p>Lundberg, Patricia Lorimer,  The Elusive <i>Beowulf</i> Poet Self-Represented in the I-Narrator and the Scops. <i>Ball State University Forum</i>&nbsp;  30.3 (1989): 5-15. </p> <p><a name="top36141160"></a><a href="#top">Top</a></p><p>Magennis, Hugh,  Michael Crichton, Ibn Fadlan, Fantasy Cinema: <i>Beowulf</i> at the Movies. <i>Old English Newsletter</i>&nbsp;  35.1 (Fall 2001): 34-38. </p><p>Manes, Christopher,  The Substance of Earth in <i>Beowulf</i> s Song of Creation. <i>English Language Notes</i>&nbsp;  31 (1994): 1-5. </p><p>Major, C. Tidmarsh,  A Christian <i>wyrd</i> Syncretism in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>English Language Notes</i>&nbsp;  32.3 (1995): 1-10. </p><p>Marino, Stephen,  <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>The Explicator</i>&nbsp;  54 (1996): 195-98. [line 512]</p><p>Maynard, Stephen,  <i>Secan deofla gedræg</i> A Note on <i>Beowulf</i> 756. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  93 (1992): 87-91. </p><p>Mazo, Jeffrey Alan,  Compound Diction and Traditional Style in <i>Beowulf</i> and <i>Genesis A</i>. <i>Oral Tradition</i>&nbsp;  6 (1991): 79-92. </p><p>McCarthy, Conor,  Language and History in Seamus Heaney s <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>English</i>&nbsp;  50 (2001): 149-58. </p><p>McCarthy, Terence,  Beowulf s Bairns: Malory s Sterner Knights. <i>Heroes and Heroines. </i>Carruthers, ed. 161-70. </p><p>McClintock, Ellery,  Translation and <i>Beowulf</i> in Translation.. Dissertation. Georgia State University. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  61, no. 11A (2000): 4379. </p><p>McConchie, R. W.,  The Use of the Verb <i>maþelian</i> in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Neuphilologische Mitteilungen</i>&nbsp;  99 (1998): 59-68. </p><p>McCully. C. B., and J. J. Anderson, ed. editors. <i>English Historical Metrics. </i>Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. </p><p>McCully, C. B.,  Domain-End Phenomena and Metrical Templates in Old English Verse. English Historical MetricsMcCully and Anderson, ed. 42-58. </p><p>McFadden, Brian,  Sleeping after the Feast: Deathbeds, Marriage Beds, and the Power-Structure of Heorot. <i>Neophilologus</i>&nbsp;  84 (2000): 629-46. </p><p>McGowan, Joseph,  Readings from the <i>Beowulf</i> Manuscript, ff. 94r-98r (the St. Christopher Folios). <i>Manuscripta</i>&nbsp;  39 (1995): 26-29. </p><p>McNamara, John,  Legends of Breca and <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Southern Folklore</i>&nbsp;  53 (1996): 153-69. </p><p>McNelis, James I., III,  The Sword Mightier Than the Pen? Hrothgar s Hilt, Theory, and Philology. Studies in English Language and LiteratureToswell and Tyler, ed. 175-85. </p><p>McTurk, Rory W.,  Variation in <i>Beowulf</i> and the Poetic <i>Edda</i> a Chronological Experiment. <a href="#chase"><i>The Dating of  Beowulf </i></a>. Chase, ed. 141-60. </p><p>Meehan, Brian,  Son of Cain or Son of Sam? Monster as Serial Killer in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>Connecticut Review</i>&nbsp;  16.2 (1994): 1-7. </p><p>Meli, Marcello,  <i>Sunne sweglwered suþan an scineð</i> Dove sorge il sole nel <i>Beowulf</i>? <i>Linguistica e filologia </i>(Bergamo)<i></i>&nbsp;  7 (1998): 29-38. </p><p>Menzer, Melinda J.,  <i>Aglæcwif Beowulf</i> (1259a): Implications for -<i>wif</i> Compounds, Grendel s Mother, and Other <i>aglæcan</i>. <i>English Language Notes</i>&nbsp;  34.1 (1996): 1-6. </p><p>Mitchell, Bruce,  Literary Lapses: Six Notes on <i>Beowulf</i> and Its Critics. <i>Review of English Studies</i>&nbsp;  43 (1992): 1-17. </p><p>________, and Susan Irvine, <i>Beowulf Repunctuated. </i>Published for the Old English Division of the Modern Language Association of America by the Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University and its Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies, 2000. </p><p>Mitchell, Bruce, and Fred C. Robinson, ed.  A Preview of <i>Beowulf: an Edition with Relevant Shorter Texts</i>. <i>Medieval English Studies Newsletter</i>&nbsp;  36 (1997): 19-22. </p><p>________, ed. editors. <i>Beowulf: an Edition with Relevant Shorter Texts. </i>Oxford, and Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell, 1998. [includes  Archaeology and <i>Beowulf</i>. by Leslie Webster]</p><p>Mizuno, Tomoaki,  The Magical Necklace and the Fatal Corselet in <i>Beowulf</i>. <i>English Studies</i>&nbsp;  80 (1999): 377-97. </p><p>Moe, Lawrence Dalton,  The Christian Passages of <i>Beowulf</i>. Dissertation. University of Minnesota. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  51A (1991): 4116. </p><p>Moffatt, Gerald John,  <i>Ealodrincende oðer sædan</i> Narrative Instability, Critical Desire and the Problem of Reading <i>Beowulf</i> 1931b-1962. Dissertation. Queen s University at Kingston. <i>Dissertation Abstracts International</i>&nbsp;  55A (1995): 2822. </p><p>Morey, Robert,