Beowulf Bibliography: 1990-2012
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Abraham, Lenore, “The Decorum of Beowulf.” Philological Quarterly 72 (1993): 267-87.

Abram, Christopher, "New Light on the Illumination of Grendel's Mere." Journal of English and Germanic Philology  109:2 (2010): 198-216.

Aciman, Alexander, and Emmett L. Rensin, Twitterature: The World's Greatest Books in Twenty Tweets or Less. New York, NY: Penguin, 2009.

Aciman, Alexander, and Emmett L. Rensin. Twitterature: The World's Greatest Books in Twenty Tweets or Less. New York, NY: Penguin, 2009.

Adderley, Mark, "To beot or not to beot: Boasting in Beowulf." In Geardagum 29 (2009): 1-16.

Aertsen, Henk, Rolf H. Bremmer, Jr., ed. Companion to Old English Poetry . Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit Press, 1994.

Aguirre Dabán, Manuel, “The Phrasal Structure of Beowulf.” SELIM 1996: Proceedings of the 9th International Conference of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature. Margarita Giménez Bon, Vickie Olsen, ed. Zaragoza: Pórtico, 1997. 8-16.

________, “Ring-Giver, Hoard-Guardian: Two World Views in Beowulf.” Papers. Fanego Lema, ed. 9-17.

Aguilar Montero, Miquel, "Fundamentos teóricos de la épica universal en la literatura germánica altomedieval: El poema de Beowulf. Espéculo: Revista de Estudios Literarios 40 (2008) n.p. (electronic).

Alexander, Michael, ed. Beowulf. London: Penguin, 1995.

________, Beowulf: A Verse Translation. Revised. London, etc.: Penguin, 2001.

Albano, Robert A., “The Role of Women in Anglo-Saxon Culture: Hildeburh in Beowulf and a Curious Counterpart in the Volsunga Saga.” English Language Notes  32 (1994): 1-10.

Alfano, Christine, “The Issue of Feminine Monstrosity: a Reevaluation of Grendel’s Mother.” Comitatus  23 (1992): 1-16.

Amodio, Mark C. "Res(is)ting the Singer: Towards a Non-performative Anglo-Saxon Oral Poetics." New Directions in Oral Theory. Amodio, Mark C., ed. Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies 287. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2005. 179-208.

________, and Katherine O'Brien O'Keeffe, ed. Unlocking the Wordhord: Anglo-Saxon Studies in Memory of Edward B. Irving, Jr. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2003.

________, “Affective Criticism, Oral Poetics, and Beowulf’s Fight with the Dragon.” Oral Tradition  10 (1995): 54-90.

Anderson, Carolyn, “Gæst, Gender, and Kin in Beowulf: Consumption of Boundaries.” Heroic Age   5 (Summer/Autumn 2001): n.p..

Anderson, Douglas A, "R. W. Chambers and The Hobbit." Tolkien Studies 3 (2006): 137-47.

Anderson, Earl R., Understanding 'Beowulf' as an Indo-European Epic: a Study in Comparative Mythology. Foreword by Mary P. Richards. Lewiston, NY; Lampeter: Mellen Press, 2010.

________, "Beow the Boy-wonder (Beowulf 12-25)." English Studies (The Netherlands) 89:6 (2008): 630-42.

Anderson, Sarah M., ed. Beowulf. Trans. by Alan Sullivan and Timothy Murphy. Longman Cultural Editions. London; New York: Pearson Longman, 2004.

Andersson, Theodore M., “Sources and Analogues.” A Beowulf Handbook. . Bjork and Niles, ed. 125-48.

Anlezark, Daniel, "Old English Epic Poetry: Beowulf." A Companion to Medieval Poetry. Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture 67. Corinne Saunders, ed. Chichester, England: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010. 141-160.

________, "Poisoned Places: the Avernian Tradition in Old English Poetry." Anglo-Saxon England 36 (2007): 103-26.

________, "Grendel and the Book of Wisdom." Notes and Queries 53:3 (2006): 262-9.

Appelbaum, David. "Monsters, Children of Chaos." Parabola 28.3 (Fall 2003): 20-25.

Askedal, John Ole, Ian Roberts, and Tomonori Matsushita, ed. Noam Chomsky and Language Descriptions. Development of the Anglo-Saxon Language and Linguistic Universals 2. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Benjamins, 2010.

________ and Hiroshi Hasegawa, ed. Germanic Languages and Linguistic Universals. Development of the Anglo-Saxon Language and Linguistic Universals 1. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Benjamins, 2009.

Atherton, Mark, “The Figure of the Archer in Beowulf and the Anglo-Saxon Psalter.” Neophilologus  77 (1993): 653-57.

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Bacigalupo, Massimo, "Scoprendo Beowulf con Seamus Heaney." I Germani e Gli Altri. Dolcetti Corazza, Vittoria; Gendre, Renato, ed. Bibliotheca Germanica: Studi e Testi 13. Alessandria: dell'Orso, 2003. 179-94.

Bagby, Benjamin, "Beowulf, the Edda, and the Performance of Medieval Epic: Notes from the Workshop of a Reconstructed 'Singer of Tales'." Performing Medieval Narrative. Vitz, Evelyn Birge; Regalado, Nancy Freeman; Lawrence, Marilyn, ed. Woodbridge, Suffolk; Rochester, NY: Brewer, 2005. 181-92.

Baker, Peter S., ed. Beowulf: Basic Readings. Basic Readings in Anglo-Saxon England 1. New York and London: Garland, 1995, reprint 2000.

________, “The Reader, the Editor, and the Electronic Critical Edition.” A Guide to Editing Middle English. Vincent P. McCarren, Douglas Moffat, ed. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998. 263-283.

________, Nicholas Howe, ed. Words and Works: Studies in Medieval English Language and Literature in Honour of Fred C. Robinson. . Toronto, Buffalo and London: University of Toronto Press, 1998.

Bammesberger, Alfred, "The Manuscript Reading at Beowulf, Line 1278B." Notes and Queries 59:1 (2012) 2-5.

________, "Old English Brost at Line 2176B of Beowulf." Notes and Queries 58:3 (2011) 347-349.

________, "A Superfluous Emendation: Beowulf, Line 255b." Notes and Queries 58:1 (2011) 7.

________, "Wealhtheow's Address to Beowulf (Beowulf, Lines 1226b-7)." Notes and Queries 57 (2010) 455-457.

________, "Hrothgar's Plight (Beowulf, line 936)." Notes and Queries 56:3 (2009): 330-2.

________, "Nu scylun hergan (Cædmon's Hymn, 1a)." ANQ 21:4 (2008): 2-6.

________, "Grendel's Ancestry." Notes and Queries 55:3 (2008): 257-60.

________, "ealond utan at Beowulf, line 2334a." Notes and Queries 54:4 (2007): 361-4.

________, "A Note on Beowulf, lines 642-51a." Notes and Queries 54:4 (2007): 359-61.

_______, "Grendel Enters Heorot." Notes and Queries 54:2 (2007): 119-20.

_______, "Eight Notes on the Beowulf Text." Inside Old English: Essays in Honour of Bruce Mitchell. Walmsley, John, ed. Oxford; Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2006. 19-37.

________, "Hildeburh's Son." Notes and Queries 53:1 (2006): 14-17.

________, "Hrothgar's Speech Welcoming Beowulf." Notes and Queries 53:3 (2006): 269-72.

________, "Old English guðrinc in Beowulf, 1118b." Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 107:1 (2006): 87-9.

________, "Old English wæteres weorpan in Beowulf, 2791a." ANQ 19:1 (2006): 3-7.

________, "The Syntactic Analysis of the Opening Verses in Beowulf." ANQ 19:4 (2006): 3-7.

________, "Who Does laþum Refer to at Beowulf, line 1257a?" Notes and Queries 53:4 (2006): 398-401.

________, "Old English cuþe folme in Beowulf, line 1303a." Neophilologus 89:4 (2005): 625-7.

________, "Old English sum in Beowulf, l. 271b." Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 106:1 (2005): 3-5.

________, "The Coastguard's Maxim Reconsidered (Beowulf, lines 287b-289)." ANQ 18:2 (2005): 3-6.

________, "The Half-line bega folces (Beowulf, 1124a)." Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 105:1 (2004): 21-3.

________, "OE befeallen in Beowulf, line 1126a." Notes and Queries 50:2 (2003): 156-8.

________, "The sequence sib ge mænum in Beowulf line 1857a." ANQ 16:4 (2003): 3-5.

________, “Further Thoughts on Beowulf line 1537a: gefeng þa be [f]leaxe.” Notes and Queries   48 (2001): 3-4.

________, “The Half-Line þenden hyt sy (Beowulf 2649b).” ANQ  14 (2001): 3-5.

________, “The Syntactic Analysis of Beowulf Lines 4-5.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  102 (2001): 131-133.

________, “Beowulf’s Landing in Denmark.” English Studies  81 (2001): 97-9.

________, “Old English reote in Beowulf line 2457a.” Notes and Queries  47 (2000): 158-9.

________, “The Superlative of Old English god in Beowulf.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  101 (2000): 519-21.

________, “What does he in lines 1392b and 1394b Refer to?” Notes and Queries  47 (2000): 403-5.

________, “Beowulf line 600a: OE sendeþ.” Notes and Queries  46 (1999): 428-30.

________, “In What Sense Was Grendel an angeng(e)a?” Notes & Queries  46 (1999): 173-76.

________, “The Half-Line freond on frætewum (Beowulf 962a).” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  99 (1998): 237-39.

________, “The Half-Line Grendeles mægum (Beowulf 2353b).” Notes and Queries  New Series 45 (1998): 2-4.

________, “The Reading of Beowulf l. 31b.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  99 (1998): 125-29.

________, “Beowulf’s Last Will.” English Studies  77 (1996): 305-10.

________, “The Emendation of Beowulf l. 586.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  97 (1996): 379-82.

________, “A Textual Note on Beowulf 431-432.” English Studies  76 (1995): 297-301.

________, “Beowulf’s Descent into Grendel’s Mere.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  96 (1995): 225-27.

________, “Zu Beowulf 386-394.” Anglia  112 (1994): 107-14.

________, “Five Beowulf Notes.” Words, Texts and Manuscripts. Korhammer, ed. 239-55.

________, “Die Lesart in Beowulf 1382a.” Anglia  108 (1990): 314-26.

________, “The Conclusion of Wealhtheow’s Speech (Beowulf 1231).” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  91 (1990): 207-08.

Barkley, H., “Tolkien, Beowulf and the Lords of the Ring.” Germanic Notes and Reviews  30 (1999): 1-4.

Barquist, C. R. and D. L. Shie, “Computer Analysis of Alliteration in Beowulf Using Distinctive Feature Theory.” Literary and Linguistic Computing  6 (1991): 274-80.

Barringer, Bob, “Adding Insult to the Inquiry: a Study of Rhetorical Jousting in Beowulf.” In Geardagum  19 (1998): 19-26.

Bately, Janet, "Bravery and the Vocabulary of Bravery in Beowulf and The Battle of Maldon." Unlocking the Wordhord.. Amodio and O'Brien O'Keeffe, ed. 2003. 274-301.

Battaglia, Frank, "Not Christianity versus Paganism, but Hell versus Bog: the Great Shift in Early Scandinavian Religion and its Implications for Beowulf." Anglo-Saxons and the North. Kilpiö et al., ed. 47-67.

________, “Sib in Beowulf.” In Geardagum  20 (1999): 27-47.

________, “The Germanic Earth Goddess in Beowulf?” Mankind Quarterly  35 (1994): 39-69.

Bazelmans, Jos, By Weapons Made Worthy: Lords, Retainers, and Their Relationship in Beowulf. Amsterdam Archaeological Studies 5. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 1999.

________, “One for All, All for One. The Old English Beowulf and the Ritual and Cosmological Character of the Relationship between Lord and Warrior-Follower in Germanic Societies.” Method and Theory in Historical Archaeology. Guy De Boe, Frans Verhaege, ed. Zellik, 1997. 51-53.

Bennett, Helen T., "The Postmodern Hall in Beowulf: Endings Embedded in Beginnings." Heroic Age 12 (2009).

________, “The Female Mourner at Beowulf’s Funeral: Filling in the Blanks / Hearing the Spaces.” Exemplaria  4 (1992): 35-50.

Benson, Larry D., Contradictions: from Beowulf to Chaucer: Selected Studies of Larry D. Benson. Theodore M. Andersson, Stephen A. Barney, ed. Aldershot, Hants, and Brookfield, Vermont: Scolar Press, 1995.

________, “The Pagan Coloring of Beowulf.” Beowulf Basic Readings. Baker, ed. 35-50.

Berkhout, Carl T., “Laurence Nowell (1530-ca. 1570).” Medieval Scholarship, Bibliographical Studies on the Formation of a Discipline, Volume 2: Literature and Philology. Helen Damico, with Donald Fennema and Karmen Lenz, ed. New York and London: Garland, 1998. 3-17.

Bertagnolli, Davide, "Un alieno aletico: Beowulf." Linguistica e Filologia 29 (2009): 123-149 (English summary).

Betancourt, Antonio Luis, Beowulf, Prince of Geatland. Colorado Springs: Dell, 1997.

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Bibere, Paul, Beowulf. British writers, Supplement VI. Jay Parini, ed. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2001.

Biggs, Frederick M., "The Dream of the Rood and Guthlac B as a Literary Context for the Monsters in Beowulf." Text, Image, Interpretation. Minnis, Alastair; Roberts, Jane, ed. 289-301.

________, "Folio 179 of the Beowulf Manuscript." Source of Wisdom. Wright, Biggs, and Hall, ed. 52-9.

________, "The Politics of Succession in Beowulf and Anglo-Saxon England." Speculum 80:3 (2005): 709-41.

________, "Beowulf and Some Fictions of the Geatish Succession." Anglo-Saxon England 32 (2003): 55-77.

__________, "Hondscioh and Æschere in Beowulf." Neophilologus 87:4 (2003): 635-52.

__________, Thomas D. Hill, Paul E. Szarmach, ed. Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture: a Trial Version. Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 74. Binghamton, NY: SUNY, 1990.

Bildhauer, Bettina, Filming the Middle Ages. London, England: Reaktion, 2011.

Bjork, Robert E., “Digressions and Episodes.” A ‘Beowulf’ Handbook. Bjork and Niles, ed. 193-212.

________, “Grí­mur Jónsson Thorkelin’s Preface to the First Edition of Beowulf 1815.” Scandinavian Studies  68 (1996): 291-320.

________, “Speech as Gift in Beowulf.” Speculum  69 (1994): 993-1022.

________ and Anita Obermeier, “Date, Provenance, Author, Audiences.” A ‘Beowulf’ Handbook. Bjork and Niles, ed. 13-34.

Bjork, Robert E. and John D. Niles, ed. A ‘Beowulf’ Handbook. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1997.

Blanton, Virginia; Scheck, Helene, ed. Intertexts: Studies in Anglo-Saxon Culture Presented to Paul E. Szarmach. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in Association with Brepols, 2008.

Bliss, Alan, The Scansion of Beowulf. Peter J. Lucas, ed. Old English Newsletter. Subsidia, 22. Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, 1995.

Blockley, Mary E., “Apposition and the Subjects of Verb-Initial Clauses.” Words and Works. Baker and Howe, ed. 173-86.

________, “Klaeber’s Relineations of Beowulf and Verses Ending in Words without Categorical Stress.” Review of English Studies  46 (1995): 321-32.

________, “Perfecting the Old English Past: Beowulf 2 and Limits on the Equivalence of the Old English Simple Past and Present Perfect.” Philological Quarterly  70 (1991): 123-39.

________ and Thomas Cable, “Kuhn’s Laws, Old English Poetry, and the New Philology.” Beowulf: Basic Readings. Baker, ed. 261-79.

Bloom, Harold, ed. Beowulf: Modern Critical Interpretations. New York: Chelsea House, 1987.

Bloomfield, Josephine, “Benevolent Authoritarianism in Klaeber’s Beowulf an Editorial Translation of Kingship.” Modern Language Quarterly  60 (1999): 129-59.

________, “Diminished by Kindness: Frederick Klaeber’s Rewriting of Wealhtheow.” Journal of English and Germanic Philology  93 (1994): 183-203.

Blurton, Heather, Cannibalism in High Medieval English Literature. New Middle Ages. Basingstoke; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.

Bodek, Richard, "Beowulf." Explicator 62:3 (2004): 130-2.

Boenig, Robert, “Musical Instruments as Iconographical Artifacts in Medieval Poetry.” Material Culture and Cultural Materialisms in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Curtis Perry, ed. Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, 5. Turnhout: Brepols, 2001. 1-15.

________, “Very Sharp/Unsharp, Unpeace/Firm Peace: Morphemic Ambiguity in Beowulf.” Neophilologus  76 (1992): 275-82.

Bolintineanu, Alexandra, "The Land of Mermedonia in the Old English Andreas." Neophilologus 93:1 (2009): 149-64.

________, "'On the borders of old stories': Enacting the Past in Beowulf and The Lord of the Rings." Tolkien and the Invention of Myth. Chance, Jane, ed. 263-73.

Booth, Paul Anthony, “King Alfred versus Beowulf: the Reeducation of the Anglo-Saxon Aristocracy.” Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester  79.3 (1997): 41-66.

Borges, Jorge Luis, “Written in a Copy of the Geste of Beowulf.” R. G. Barnes, trans. Poetry  162 (1993): 159. [poem]

Borroff, Marie, “Systematic Sound Symbolism in the Long Alliterative Line in Beowulf and Sir Gawain.” English Historical Metrics. McCully and Anderson, ed. 120-33.

Boyle, Leonard E., “The Nowell Codex and the Dating of Beowulf.” Dating of Beowulf. Chase, ed. 23-32.

Bravo García, Antonio, “Las fórmulas verbales en la épica anglosajona y castellana: un estudio contrastivo.” Homenaje a Álvaro Galmés de Fuentes. Ana M. Cano Gonzáles, et al., ed. Oviedo and Madrid, 1985-87. II. 39-47.

Breen, Nathan A., "Beowulf's Wealhtheow and the Ðeowwealh: a Legal Source for the Queen's Name." ANQ 22:2 (2009): 2-4.

Breeze, Andrew, “Beowulf, The Battle of Maldon: trem ‘pace’ and Welsh tremyn ‘journey’.” Notes and Queries  40 (1993): 9-10.

________, “Wered ‘sweet drink’ at Beowulf 496: Welsh gwirod ‘liquor, drink’.” Notes and Queries  40 (1993): 433-34.

________, “Beowulf 875-902 and the Sculptures at Sangüesa, Spain.” Notes and Queries  38 (1991): 2-13. ill.

Breizmann, Natalia, “Beowulf as Romance: Literary Interpretation as Quest.” Modern Language Notes  113 (1998): 1022-35.

Bremmer, Rolf H., Jr., “Grendel’s Arm and the Law.” Studies in English Language and Literature. Toswell and Tyler, ed. 121-32.

________, Jan van den Ber, and David F. Johnson, ed. Notes on Beowulf. Leeds: Leeds Studies in English, 1991.

Bruce, Alexander Martin and Paul E. Szarmach, ed. Scyld and Scef: Expanding the Analogues. New York: Garland Publications, 2002.

Bruce, Alexander Martin, “An Education in the Mead-Hall: Beowulf’s Lessons for Young Warriors.” Heroic Age  5 (Summer/Autumn 2001): n.p..

Brunetti, Giuseppe, “Il Beowulf in inglese moderno.” Testo medievale e traduzione. Cammarota and Molinari, ed. 93-101.

________, “Il Beowulf in inglese moderno: traduzioni dal 1940 al 1990.” Teoria e pratica della traduzione nel medioevo germanico. Maria Vittoria, et al., ed. Padua: Unipress, 1994. 139-58.

Burrow, J. A., The Poetry of Praise. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature 69. Cambridge; New York: CUP, 2008.

Button, Susan, "Beowulf's 'blacne leoman' and Elene's 'hellebryne': Textures of Light and Flame in OE Literature." In Geardagum 29 (2009): 17-32.

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Cable, Thomas, “Clashing Stress in the Metres of Old, Middle, and Renaissance English.” English Historical Metrics. McCully and Anderson, ed. 7-29.

________, “Type D Verses as Evidence for the Rhythmic Basis of Old English Meter.” Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 157-70.

Cahill, James, "Reconsidering Robinson's Beowulf." English Studies (The Netherlands) 89:3 (2008): 251-62.

Caie, Graham D., "A Case of Double Vision: Denmark in Beowulf and Beowulf in England." From Beowulf to Caxton. Matsushita, Schmidt, and Wallace, ed. 2011. 9-27.

Cain, Christopher M., “Beowulf the Old Testament, and the Regula Fidei.” Renascence  49 (1997): 227-40.

Carroll, Joseph, “The Prose Edda the Heimskringla and Beowulf: Mythical, Legendary, and Historical Dialogues.” In Geardagum  18 (1997): 15-38.

Carruthers, Leo, "Rewriting Genres: Beowulf as Epic Romance." Palimpsests and the Literary Imagination of Medieval England. Leo Carruthers, Raeleen Chai-Elsholz, and Tatjana Silee, ed. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. 139-155.

________, Beowulf. Paris: Didier, 1998.

________, ed. Heroes and Heroines in Medieval English Literature. Cambridge: Brewer, 1994.

________, “Kingship and Heroism in Beowulf.” Heroes and Heroines. Carruthers, ed. 19-29.

Carsley, Catherine A., “Reassessing Cultural Memory in Beowulf.” Assays  7 (1992): 31-41.

Carter, Richard, “The Electronic Beowulf.” Humanities  20.2 (1999): 23.

Cavill, Paul, “Beowulf and Andreas Two Maxims.” Neophilologus  77 (1993): 479-87.

Cermák, Jan (ed. and trans.), Béowulf. Prague: Torst, 2003.

________, “'A Prow in Foam': The Old English Bahuvrihi Compound as a Poetic Device.” Prague Studies in English  (Charles Univ.) 22 (2000 for 1997): 13-31.

________, “Hie dygel lond warigeaþ: Spatial Imagery in Five Beowulf Compounds.” Linguistica Pragensia  1 (1996): 24-34.

________, “Beowulf 566: What Ebbing Waves Would Leave.” Brno Studies in English  19 (1991): 45-53.

Chance, Jane, ed., Tolkien and the Invention of Myth: a Reader. Lexington: Kentucky UP, 2004.

________, “The Structural Unity of Beowulf: The Problem of Grendel’s Mother.” New Readings on Women in Old English Literature. Helen Damico, Alexandra Hennessey Olsen, ed. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1990. 248-61.

Chase, Colin, ed. The Dating of Beowulf. 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. ]

Chase, Colin, “Opinons on the Date of Beowulf, 1815-1980.” The Dating of Beowulf. Colin Chase, ed. 3-8.

________, “Saints‘ Lives, Royal Lives, and the Date of Beowulf.” The Dating of Beowulf. Colin Chase, ed. 161-71.

________, “Beowulf, Bede, and St. Oswine: The Hero’s Pride in Old English Hagiography.” Beowulf Basic Readings . Baker, ed. 181-93.

Chen, Kuo-jung, "The Untold Stories of Beowulf: Cinematic Renditions and Textual Interpretations." Tamkang Review: A Quarterly of Literary and Cultural Studies 41:1 (2010) 111-131 (English summary).

Cherniss, Michael D., “‘Beowulf Was Not There’: Compositional Implications of Beowulf Lines 1299b-1301.” Oral Tradition  4 (1989): 316-29.

Chickering, Howell D. "From 'Lo!' to 'So,': Modern Poetic Paraphrases of Beowulf." The Linguistic Society of Petersburg Lecture Series. Yuri Kleiner and Nicolay Yakovlev, ed. St. Petersburg: Linguistic Society of St. Petersburg, 2003. 5-19.

________, “Lyric Time in Beowulf.” Journal of English and Germanic Philology  91 (1992): 489-509.

Chocheyras, Jacques, “Les légendes épiques du Danemark (VIIIe - Xe siècles) et les origines de la chanson de geste.” Olifant  18 (1993-94): 289-302.

Christie, Edward. "The Image of the Letter: From the Anglo-Saxons to the Electronic Beowulf." Culture, Theory and Critique 44 (2003): 129-50.

Clark, David, Between Medieval Men: Male Friendship and Desire in Early Medieval English Literature. Oxford, England: Oxford UP, 2009.

________, "Relaunching the Hero: the Case of Scyld and Beowulf Re-opened." Neophilologus 90:4 (2006): 621-42.

Clark, Francelia Mason, Theme in Oral Epic and in Beowulf. New York and London: Garland, 1995.

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Clark, George, "The Date of Beowulf and the Arundel Psalter Gloss," Modern Philology 106:4 (2009): 677-685.

________, “The Hero and the Theme.” A Beowulf Handbook. Bjork and Niles, ed. 271-90.

________, “Beowulf the Last Word.” Old English and New. Hall, et al., ed. 15-30.

________, Beowulf. Twayne’s English Authors Series, 477. Boston: Twayne, 1990.

Clark, Tom. A Case for Irony in 'Beowulf', With Particular Reference to Its Epithets. Europäische Hochschulschriften, ser. 14: Angelsächsische Sprache und Literatur 402. Bern, Frankfurt am Main, and New York: Peter Lang, 2003. 300.

Classen, Albrecht, ed. Laughter in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Times: Epistemology of a Fundamental Human Behavior, Its Meaning, and Consequences. Berlin; New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 2010.

________, ed. Old Age in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: Interdisciplinary Approaches to a Neglected Topic. Fundamentals of Medieval and Early Modern Culture 2. Berlin; New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 2007.

Clemoes, Peter, “Style as a Criterion for Dating the Composition of Beowulf.” Dating of Beowulf. Chase, ed. 173-85.

Clover, Carol J, “The Germanic Context of the Unferth Episode.” Beowulf: Basic Readings . Baker, ed. 127-54.

Cohen, Jeffrey J., "The Promise of Monsters." The Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous. Asa Simon Mittman and Peter J. Dendle, ed. Surrey, England: Ashgate, 2012. 449-464.

________, “The Use of Monsters and the Middle Ages.” SELIM: Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature  2 (1992): 47-69.

Conner, Patrick W., “The Beowulf Workstation: One Model of Computer-Assisted Literary Pedagogy.” Literary and Linguistic Computing  6 (1991): Special Issue on Computers and Medieval Studies (Edited by Marilyn Deegan with Andrew Armour and Mark Infusino), 50-58.

Cooke, William, "Hrothulf: a Richard III, or an Alfred the Great?" Studies in Philology 104:2 (2007): 175-98.

________, "Who Cursed Whom, and When? The Cursing of the Hoard and Beowulf's Fate." Medium Ævum 76:2 (2007): 207-24.

________, "Three Notes on Swords in Beowulf." Medium Ævum 72 (2003): 302-07.

________, "Two Notes on Beowulf (with Glances at Vafþruðnismál, Blickling Homily 16, and Andreas, Lines 839-846)." Medium Ævum 72 (2003): 297-301.

Cooper, Carolyn, "From Beowulf to Bounty Killa: Or How I Ended Up Studying Slackness." Journal of West Indian Literature 18:2 (2010) 131-144.

Cooper, David L., “Attractor Dynamics in Beowulf.” Linguistic Attractors: the Cognitive Dynamics of Language Acquisition and Change. Human Cognitive Processing 2. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1999. 206-41

Corazza, Dolcetti, "Improvvisazione fra oralità e scrittura nel Medioevo germanico." L'improvvisazione in Musica e in Letteratura. Ferreccio, Giuliana; Racca, Davide, ed. Indagini e Prospettive 17. Turin: L'Harmattan Italia, 2007. 18-33.

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_______, "Beowulf 2298a: on þ[ā] westenne?" Notes and Queries 43 (1996): 254-57.

_______, "The First Two Editions of Beowulf: Thorkelin's (1815) and Kemble's (1833)." The Editing of Old English: Papers from the 1990 Manchester Conference. Ed. D. G. Scragg and Paul E. Szarmach. Woodbridge: Brewer, 1994. 239-50.

Hall, Joan H., Nick Doane, Dick Ringler, ed. Old English and New: Studies in Language and Linguistics in Honor of Frederic G. Cassidy. New York and London: Garland, 1992.

Hall, Mark F., "The Theory and Practice of Alliterative Verse in the Works of J. R. R. Tolkien." Mythlore 25:1-2 (2006): 41-52.

Hall, Simon, “Beowulf: New Light on the Dark Ages.” History Today  (December 1998): 4-5. ill.

Hammond, Wayne G.; Scull, Christina, ed. 'The Lord of the Rings' 1954-2004: Scholarship in Honor of Richard E. Blackwelder. Milwaukee, WI: Marquette UP, 2006.

Hanley, Wayne, “Grendel’s Humanity Again.” In Geardagum  11 (1990): 5-13.

Harder, Bernie, "A Dialogic Reading of Oral Literature: Harry Robinson's 'Write It on Your Heart' and Beowulf." Interdisciplinary and Cross-cultural Narratives in North America. Anderson, Mark Cronlund; Blayer, Irene Maria F., ed. Studies on themes and motifs in literature 73. New York; Frankfurt: Lang, 2005. 47-59.

Harris, A. Leslie, “The Vatic Mode in Beowulf.” Neophilologus  74 (1990): 591-600.

Harris, Jason Marc, "Perilous Shores: the Unfathomable Supernaturalism of Water in 19th-century Scottish Folklore." Mythlore 28:1/2 (2009): 5-25.

Harris, Joseph, "Beasts of Battle, South and North." Source of Wisdom. Wright, Biggs, and Hall, ed. 3-25.

________, “Beowulf as Epic.” Oral Tradition  15 (2000): 159-69.

________, “‘Double Scene’ and ‘mise en abyme’ in Beowulfian Narrative.” Gudar på jorden. Festskrift till Lars Lönnroth. Stina Hansson, Mats Malm, ed. Stockholm and Stehag: Symposion, 2000. pp. 322-38.

________, “The Dossier on Byggvir, God and Hero. Cur deus homo.” Arv: Nordic Yearbook of Folklore  55 (1999): 7-23.

________, “A Nativist Approach to Beowulf: the Case of Germanic Elegy.” Companion to Old English Poetry. Aertsen and Bremmer, ed. 45-62.

________, “Beowulf’s Last Words.” Speculum  67 (1992): 1-32.

Hart, Thomas Elwood, "Philologia, Beowulf, Commedia." Publications of the Modern Language Association 126:3 (2011) 813-815. Reply to Earl, "The Forbidden Beowulf" Publications of the Modern Language Association 2010.

Hartman, Megan E, "Stressed and Spaced Out: Manuscript Evidence for Beowulfian Prosody." Anglo-Saxon 1 (2007): 201-20.

Hasenfratz, Robert J., "'On sidne sæ': Beowulf and the Bibliographers." Old English Newsletter: Subsidia 32 (2004): 63-71.

________, “A Decade’s Worth of Beowulf Scholarship: Observations on Compiling a Bibliography.” Old English Newsletter  27.3 (1994): 35-40.

________, Beowulf Scholarship: an Annotated Bibliography, 1979-1994. New York and London: Garland, 1993. [Continued in the online Beowulf Bibliography 1979-1994 without annotations.]

________, “The Theme of the ‘Penitent Damned’ and Its Relation to Beowulf and Christ and Satan.” Leeds Studies in English and Kindred Languages  New Series 21 (1990): 45-69.

Hashmi, Alamgir, "Beowulf in Pakistan." Northwest Review 48:2 (2010): 133-8.

Hawkins, Emma B., “Hild and Gu: the War Maidens of Beowulf.” In Geardagum  15 (1994): 55-75.

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Heaney, Seamus, trans. Beowulf. London: Faber, 1999.

_______, “The Drag of the Golden Chain.” Times Literary Supplement  (12 November 1999): 14-16.

________, “The Last Survivor.” Times Literary Supplement  (14 November 1997): 13

________, “The Funeral of Beowulf.” Times Literary Supplement  (19 September 1997): 4.

________, trans. “The Welcome to Denmark.” The Literary Man: Essays Presented to Donald W. Hannah. Karl-Heinz Westarp, ed. Aarhus, 1996. 7-8.

________, “Exile Runes: from Beowulf Lines 1117-40.” London Review of Books  (21 September 1995): 8.

Hellgardt, Ernst, "Beowulf Again? Of course!" Anglia 125:2 (2007): 304-28.

Hennequin, M. Wendy, "We've Created a Monster: the Strange Case of Grendel's Mother." English Studies (The Netherlands) 89:5 (2008): 503-23.

Herman, David, and Becky Childs. "Narrative and Cognition in Beowulf." Style 37 (2003): 177-203.

Herschend, Frands, “Beowulf and St. Sabas: the Tension between the Individual and the Collective in Germanic Society Around 500 A.D.” Tor: tidskrift för arkeologi  24 (1992): 145-64.

Hiatt, Alfred, "Beowulf Off the Map." Anglo-Saxon England 38 (2009): 11-40.

Hieatt, Constance B., “Beowulf’s Last Words vs. Bothvar Bjarki’s: How the Hero Faces His God.” Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 403-24.

Higley, Sarah L., "Thought in Beowulf and Our Perception of It: Interiority, Power, and the Problem of the Revealed Mind." The Hero Recovered, Waugh and Weldon, ed. 2010. 23-46.

Hill, John M., "The King and the Warrior: Hrothgar's Sitting Masculinity." The Hero Recovered, Waugh and Weldon, ed. 2010. 65-82.

________, The Narrative Pulse of 'Beowulf': Arrivals and Departures. Toronto Old English series 17. Toronto; Buffalo, NY; London: Toronto UP, 2008.

________, "Beowulf Editions for the Ancestors: Cultural Genealogy and Power in the Claims of Nineteenth-century English and American Editors and Translators." Constructing Nations, Reconstructing Myth. Wawn et al., ed. 53-69.

________, "Current General Trends in Beowulf Studies." Literature Compass 4:1 (2007): 66-88.

________, "The Sacrificial Synecdoche of Hands, Heads, and Arms in Anglo-Saxon Heroic Story." Naked before God: Uncovering the Body in Anglo-Saxon England. Benjamin C. Withers and Jonathan Wilcox, ed. Medieval European Studies 3. Morgantown, WV: West Virginia University Press, 2003. 116-37.

________, "Violence and the Making of Wiglaf." 'A great effusion of blood?': Interpreting Medieval Violence. Meyerson, Mark D.; Thiery, Daniel; Falk, Oren, ed. Toronto; Buffalo, NY; London: Toronto UP, 2004. 19-33.

________, “The Ethnopsychology of In-law Feud and the Remaking of Group Identity in Beowulf: The Cases of Hengest and Ingeld.” Philological Quarterly  78 (1999): 97-124.

________, “Social Milieu.” A Beowulf Handbook . Bjork and Niles, ed. 255-69.

________, The Cultural World in Beowulf. Anthropological Horizons 6. Toronto, Buffalo, and London: University of Toronto Press, 1995.

________, “Hrothgar’s Noble Rule: Love and the Great Legislator.” Social Approaches to Viking Studies. Ross Samson, ed. Glasgow: Cruithne Press, 1991. 169-78.

Hill, Thomas D., "Beowulf's Roman Rites: Roman Ritual and Germanic Tradition." Journal of English and Germanic Philology  106:3 (2007): 325-35.

________, “The Christian Language and Theme of Beowulf.” Companion to Old English Poetry. Aertsen and Bremmer, ed. 63-77.

________, “Wealhtheow as a Foreign Slave: Some Critical Analogues.” Philological Quarterly  69 (1990): 106-12.

________, “Beowulf as Seldguma: Beowulf lines 247-51.” Neophilologus  74 (1990): 637-39.

Hills, Catherine M., “Beowulf and Archaeology.” A Beowulf Handbook. Bjork and Niles, ed. 291-310.

Hines, John, "Beowulf and Archaeology - Revisited." Aedificia Nova. Karkov and Damico, ed. 89-105.

Hock, Hans Henrich, “On the Origin and Development of Relative Clauses in Early Germanic, with Special Emphasis on Beowulf.” Stæfcræft: Studies in Germanic Linguistics. Elmer H. Antonsen, Hans Henrich Hock, ed. Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 79. Amsterdam: 1991. 55-89.

Hodapp, William F., "'No hie fæder cunnon'; But Twenty-first-century Film Makers Do." Essays in Medieval Studies 26 (2010): 101-8.

Hodges, Kenneth, “Beowulf’s Shoulder Pin and wið earm gesæt.” English Language Notes  34.3 (1997): 4-10.

Hordis, Sandra. "What Seamus Heaney Did to Beowulf: An Essay on Translation and Transmutation of English Identity." LATCH: A Journal for the Study of the Literary Artifact in Theory, Culture, or History 3 (2010) 164-172.

Horner, Shari, “Voices from the Margins: Women and Textual Enclosure in Beowulf.” The Discourse of Enclosure: Representing Women in Old English Literature. SUNY Series in Medieval Studies. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2001.

Hough, Carole, "Beowulf lines 480b and 531a: beore druncen Again." Neophilologus 88:2 (2004): 303-5.

Howard, Elizabeth, "Beowulf was Not god cyning." In Geardagum 29 (2009): 45-68.

________, "The Clothes Make the Man: Transgressive Disrobing and Disarming in Beowulf." Styling Texts: Dress and Fashion in Literature. Kuhn, Cynthia; Carlson, Cindy L., ed. Youngstown, NY: Cambria Press, 2007. 13-32.

Howard, Patricia J., “Irony of Fate in Cecelia Holland’s Two Ravens: Echoes of Beowulf and Icelandic Saga.” The Comparatist  14 (1990): 15-25.

Howe, Nicholas, "Beowulf in the House of Dickens." Latin Literature and English Lore. O'Brien O'Keeffe and Orchard, ed. 421-39.

Howlett, D. R., “New Criteria for Editing Beowulf.” The Editing of Old English: Papers from the 1990 Manchester Conference. D. C. Scragg, Paul E. Szarmach, ed. Cambridge: Brewer, 1994. 69-84.

Hubert, Susan J., “The Case for Emendation of Beowulf 250b.” In Geardagum  19 (1998): 51-54.

Hudson, Marc, 'Beowulf': a Translation and Commentary. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Press, London and Toronto: Associated University Presses, 1990.

Hurley, Mary Kate, "The Ruins of the Past: Beowulf and Bethlehem Steel." Heroic Age 13 (2010).

Hussey, Matthew T., "The Possible Relationship of the Beowulf and the Blickling Homilies Manuscripts." Notes and Queries 56:1 (2009): 1-4.

Hutcheson, B. R., "Kaluza's Law, the Dating of Beowulf, and the Old English Poetic Tradition." Journal of English and Germanic Philology 103:3 (2004): 297-322.

________, “Beowulf 62: an Impossible Emendation.” Notes and Queries  40 (1993): 3-5.

________, “The Scansion of Old English Weak Verbs in -ian.” Notes and Queries  38 (1991): 144-46.

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Iglesias-Rábade, Luis, “Beowulf Some Examples of Binary Structures Traditionally Punctuated as Paratactic Sequences.” SELIM: Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature  2 (1992): 6-30.

Ignoto M. J., “Beowulf, Hamlet and Edward DeVere.” Shakespeare Oxford Society Newsletter  26.2 (1990): 3-6.

Irving, Edward B., Jr., A Reading of Beowulf. Revised edition, with preface by Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe. Provo, Utah: Chaucer Studio, 1999.

________, “Christian and Pagan Elements.” A Beowulf Handbook. . Bjork and Niles, ed. 175-92.

________, Favorite Passages from ‘Beowulf’. Provo, Utah: Chaucer Studio, 1997. Abridged recording.

________, “Heroic Worlds: ‘The Knight’s Tale’ and Beowulf.” Literature and Religion in the Later Middle Ages: Philological Studies in Honor of Siegfried Wenzel. Richard G. Newhauser, and John A. Alford, ed. Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies 118. Binghamton, New York: 1995. 43-59

________, “Heroic Role-Models: Beowulf and Others.” Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 347-72.

________, “Beowulf.” ANQ  New Series 3 (1990): 65-69.

Irwin, Aisling, “Beowulf Treasure Is Find of the Decade.” Daily Telegraph  (23 April 1997): 3 ill.

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Jack, George, ed. Beowulf: a Student Edition. Oxford: Clarendon; New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. [corrected reprint of 1994 edition].

Jensen, S. R., Beowulf and the Battle-Beasts of Yore. Narrated by S.R. Jensen, Illustrated by Derek Allen. Narrabeen, Sydney: ARRC Publishing, 2004.

________, Beowulf and the Monsters. Adapted and Abridged from the Old English poem, Beowulf. Sydney: by the author, 1997 (rvsd. 1999).

________, Beowulf and the Swedish Dragon. Sydney: by the author, 1993.

Jimura, Akiyuki, “A Comparative Study of Beowulf and Yamato Takeru.” In Geardagum  14 (1993): 79-87.

Jin, Koichi, “Emending Beowulf 1333.” Medieval English Studies Newsletter  31 (1994): 12-16.

John, Eric, “Beowulf and the Margins of Literacy.” Beowulf: Basic Readings . Baker, ed. 51-77.

Johnson, David F., “The Gregorian Grendel: Beowulf 705B-09 and the Limits of the Demonic.” Rome and the North. Bremmer et al., ed. 51-65.

________, trans. Beowulf and the Monsters: Adapted and Abridged from the Old English Poem, Beowulf. Sydney: Australian RRC, 1997.

Jones, Chris, "The Reception of William Morris's Beowulf." Writing on the Image: Reading William Morris. Latham, David, ed. Toronto; Buffalo, NY; London: Toronto UP, 2007. 197-208.

________, "Where now the harp? Listening for the Sounds of Old English Verse, from Beowulf to the Twentieth Century." Oral Tradition 24:2 (2009): 485-502.

de Jongh, Nicholas, “The Beowulf at Oxford’s Door.” The Guardian  (18 July 1991): 23.

Jordan, Jessica Hope, "Women Refusing the Gaze: Theorizing Thryth's 'unqueenly custom' in Beowulf and the Bride's Revenge in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill." Heroic Age 9 (2006).

Joy, Eileen A., "'In his eyes stood a light, not beautiful': Levinas, Hospitality, Beowulf." Levinas and Medieval Literature: the 'Difficult Reading' of English and Rabbinic Texts. Astell, Ann W.; Jackson, J. A., ed. Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne UP, 2009. 57-84.

________, and Ramsey, Mary K., ed. The Postmodern Beowulf: a Critical Casebook. Morgantown: West Virginia UP, 2006.

________, "James W. Earl's 'Thinking about Beowulf': Ten Years Later." Heroic Age 8 (2005).

Jurasinski, Stefan, "Caring for the Dead in The Fortunes of Men." Philological Quarterly 86:4 (2007): 343-63.

________, "The Feminine Name Wealhtheow and the Problem of Beowulfian Anthroponymy." Neophilologus 91:4 (2007): 701-15.

________, Ancient Privileges: 'Beowulf', Law, and the Making of Germanic Antiquity. Medieval European Studies 6. Morgantown: West Virginia UP, 2006.

________, "Beowulf 73: 'Public Land', Germanic Egalitarianism, and Nineteenth-Century Philology." Journal of English and Germanic Philology 103:3 (2004): 323-40.

________, "The Ecstasy of Vengeance: Legal History, Old English Scholarship, and the 'Feud' of Hengest." Review of English Studies 55:222 (2004): 641-61.

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Kaewert, Julie, Unsigned. Booklover's Mystery Series 5. New York: Random House, 2001. [featuring Beowulf MS and dating of Beowulf]

Kahlas-Tarkka, Leena, "Lohikäärmeitä ja Sankareita. (Dragons and Heroes.)" Englannin Aika: Elävän Kielen Kartoitusta (The Time of English: Charting a Living Language). Nevalainen, Terttu; Rissanen, Matti; Taavitsainen, Irma, ed. Helsinki: Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö, 2004. 224-32.

Karasawa, Kazutomo, "A Note on egesan ne gymeð in Beowulf line 1757." Modern Philology 106:1 (2008): 101-8.

Karasawa, Kazutomo, "Hrothgar in the Germanic Context of Beowulf." From Beowulf to Caxton. Matsushita, Schmidt, and Wallace, ed. 2011. 29-53.

Karkov, Catherine E., ed. Poetry, Place, and Gender: Studies in Medieval Culture in Honor of Helen Damico. Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Inst., 2009.

________, and Damico, Helen, ed. Aedificia Nova: Studies in honor of Rosemary Cramp. Publications of the Richard Rawlinson Center. Kalamazoo, MI: Medieval Inst., 2008.

________, and Farrell, Robert, “The Gnomic Passages of Beowulf.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  91 (1990): 295-310.

Kaya, Şebnem. "Beowulf ve Sutton Hoo Gemi Mezarlığı: Anglosakson İngiltere' de Doğu-Batı Etkileşimi." Littera 29 (2011) 203-214 (English summary).

Keddie, James, “Simplifying Resolution in Beowulf.” Prosody and Poetics. Toswell, ed. 80-101.

Kellogg, Robert L., “The Context for Epic in Later Anglo-Saxon England.” Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 139-56.

Kendall, Calvin B., The Metrical Grammar of Beowulf. Cambridge Studies in Anglo-Saxon England 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991.

________, and Peter S. Wells, ed. Voyage to the Other World: the Legacy of Sutton Hoo. Medieval Studies at Minnesota 5. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1992.

Kermode, Frank, “The Geat of Geats.” New York Review  (July 20,2000): 18-21.

Kiefer, Frederick, ed. Masculinities and Femininities in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance 23. Turnhout: Brepols, 2009.

Kiernan, Kevin, ed. Electronic Beowulf 3.0, Third Edition, DVD with User Guide. Ionut Emil Iacob, programmer. London and Chicago: British Library and University of Chicago Press, 2011.

________, Kevin, "Index and Guide" to the Third Edition of Electronic Beowulf, 2010:
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________, Online illustrated version of “Part One: Thorkelin's Discovery of Beowulf,” The Thorkelin Transcripts of ‘Beowulf’, Anglistica XXV (Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger, 1986), pp. 1-41, for Third Edition of Electronic Beowulf, 2010:
http://www.uky.edu/~kiernan/Thorkelin/Th_1/

________, Online illustrated version of “Part Three: The Reliability of the Transcripts,” and the “Conclusion” to The Thorkelin Transcripts of ‘Beowulf’, Anglistica XXV (Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger, 1986), pp. 97-151, for Third Edition of Electronic Beowulf, 2010:
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________, "The nathwylc Scribe and the nathwylc Text of Beowulf." Poetry, Place, and Gender, Karkov, ed. 98-131.

________, ed., with Andrew Prescott, Elizabeth Solopova, David French, Linda Cantara, Michael Ellis, and Cheng Jiun Yuan, Electronic Beowulf. London: British Library, and Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1999; Rev. ed. Electronic Beowulf 2.0, ed. Kevin Kiernan with Ionut Emil Iacob. London: The British Library, 2004. 2 CD-ROMS

________, and Linda Cantara. Guide to the Electronic Beowulf. London: British Library, and Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1999. Rev. ed. Electronic Beowulf 2.0. London: The British Library, 2004.

________, "N. R. Ker (1908-1982)," Medieval Scholarship, Bibliographical Studies on the Formation of a Discipline, Volume 2: Literature and Philology. Helen Damico, with Donald Fennema and Karmen Lenz, ed. New York and London: Garland, 1998. 425-38.

________, “The Conybeare-Madden Collation of Thorkelin’s Beowulf.” Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts and Their Heritage. Phillip Pulsiano, and Elaine Treharne, ed. Aldershot, Hants, England, and Brookfield, Vermont: Ashgate, 1997. 117-136.

________, Beowulf and the Beowulf Manuscript. Revised edition with foreword by Katherine O‘Brien O‘Keeffe. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996. ill.

________, “The Electronic Beowulf.” Computers in Libraries  15.2 (1995): 14-15. ill.

________, “The Legacy of Wiglaf: Saving a Wounded Beowulf.” Beowulf: Basic Readings . Baker, ed. 195-218. [Revision of 1986 essay]

________, “Old Manuscripts / New Technologies.” Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts: Basic Readings.  Mary Richards, ed. New York: Garland (1994): 37-54.

________, “The Eleventh-Century Origin of Beowulf and the Beowulf Manuscript.” Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts: Basic Readings. Mary Richards, ed. New York: Garland. 1994. 277-299. [Reprinted from 1981 edition of The Dating of Beowulf, Chase ed.]

________, “Opening the Electronic Beowulf.” Old English Newsletter  27.1 (1993): 35-40. ill.

________, “Digital Image Processing and the Beowulf Manuscript.” Literary and Linguistic Computing  6 (1991): Special Issue on Computers and Medieval Studies. Marilyn Deegan with Andrew Armour and Mark Infusino, ed. 20-27. ill.

________, “A Long Footnote for J. Gerritsen’s ‘supplementary’ Description of BL Cotton MS Vitellius A. XV.” English Studies  72 (1991): 489-96.

Kightley, Michael R., "Reinterpreting Threats to Face: the Use of Politeness in Beowulf, ll. 407-472." Neophilologus 93:3 (2009): 511-20.

________, "Heorot or Meduseld? Tolkien's use of Beowulf in 'The King of the Golden Hall'." Mythlore 24:3/4 (2006): 119-34.

Kilpiö, Matti, et al., ed. Anglo-Saxons and the North: Essays Reflecting the Theme of the 10th Meeting of the International Society of Anglo-Saxonists in Helsinki, August 2001. Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 364: Essays in Anglo-Saxon studies 1. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2009.

Kilpiö, Matti, “Beowulf 1763 adl oððe ecg: A corruption of adl oððe ece?” Notes & Queries  n.s. 48 (2001): 97-98.

Kim, Susan M., "'As I once did with Grendel': Boasting and Nostalgia in Beowulf." Modern Philology 103:1 (2005): 4-27.

King, Judy, "Transforming the Hero: Beowulf and the Conversion of Hunferth." The Hero Recovered, Waugh and Weldon, ed. 2010. 47-64.

________, "Launching the Hero: The Case of Scyld and Beowulf." Neophilologus 87 (2003): 453-71.

Kisor, Yvette, "Numerical Composition and Beowulf: a Reconsideration." Anglo-Saxon England 38 (2009): 41-76.

Klaeber, Friedrich, The Christian Elements in Beowulf. Paul Battles, trans. Old English Newsletter  Subsidia, 24. Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute and Rawlinson Center, Western Michigan University, (1996 [1997]).

Klein, Thomas, "Stonc æfter stane (Beowulf, l. 2288a): Philology, Narrative Context, and the Waking Dragon." Journal of English and Germanic Philology  106:1 (2007): 22-44.

Kleinschmidt, Harald, “Architecture and the Dating of Beowulf.” Poetica (Tokyo)  34 (1991): 39-56.

Knowlton, Edgar C., Jr., Zacharias P. Thundy, and Andrew Galloway, [Correspondence on 1990 article by Galloway.] Publications of the Modern Language Association  106 (1991): 308-12.

Köberl, Johann, “Referential Ambiguity as a Structuring Principle in Beowulf.” Neophilologus  79 (1995): 481-95.

Kolb, Eduard, “Schiff und Seefahrt im Beowulf und im Andreas.” Meaning and Beyond: Ernst Leisi zum 70. Geburtstag. Udo Fries, and Martin Heusser, ed. Tübingen, 1989. 237-52.

Konstan, David; Raaflaub, Kurt A., ed. Epic and History. Ancient World: Comparative Histories. Chichester; Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.

Koppelman, Kate, "Fearing my Neighbor: the Intimate Other in Beowulf and the Old English Judith." Comitatus 35 (2004): 1-21.

Korhammer, Michael, with Karl Reichl, and Hans Sauer, ed. Words, Texts and Manuscripts: Studies in Anglo-Saxon Culture Presented to Helmut Gneuss on the Occasion of His Sixty-Fifth Birthday. Woodbridge and Rochester, New York: Brewer, 1992.

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Lane, Lauriat, “A Draft of the First and Last Beowulf Cantos.” English Studies in Canada  22 (1996): 337-39.

Lane, Michael Stephen, “Remembrance of the Past in Beowulf.” In Geardagum  21 (2000): 41-59.

Lapidge, Michael, “Beowulf and Perception.” Proceedings of the British Academy  111 (2001): 61-97. [Sir Israel Gollancz Memorial Lecture]

________, “The Archetype of Beowulf.” Anglo Saxon England  29 (2000): 5-41.

________, “Beowulf and the Psychology of Terror.” Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period. Damico and Leyerle, ed. 373-402.

Lee, Alvin A., Gold-Hall and Earth-Dragon: Beowulf as Metaphor. Toronto, Buffalo, and London: University of Toronto Press, 1998.

________, “Symbolism and Allegory.” A ‘Beowulf’ Handbook. Bjork and Niles, ed. 233-54.

________, “Gold-Hall and Earth-Dragon: Beowulf and ‘First Phase’ Language.” English Studies in Canada  19 (1993): 201-08.

Lee, Dongill. "Implication of Sword (Weapon) in Heroic Poetry." Medieval and Early Modern English Studies 19:1 (2011) 1-24 (In Korean; English summary).

Lees, Clare A., “Men and Beowulf.” Medieval Masculinities: Regarding Men in the Middle Ages. Clare A. Lees, ed. Minneapolis and London, 1994. 129-48.

Lehmann, Ruth P. M., “Ecgþeow the Wægmunding: Geat or Swede?” English Language Notes  31 (1994): 1-5.

________, “Dawnlight in the Dark Ages.” Studia Neophilologica  66 (1994): 175-79.

Leneghan, Francis, "The Poetic Purpose of the Offa Digression in Beowulf." Review of English Studies 60:246 (2009): 538-60.

Lerer, Seth, “Beowulf and Contemporary Critical Theory.” A ‘Beowulf’ Handbook. Bjork and Niles, ed. 325-39.

________, “Grendel’s Glove.” English Literary History  61 (1994): 721-51.

Liberman, Anatoly, “The ‘Icy’ Ship of Scyld Scefing: Beowulf 33.” Bright Is the Ring of Words: Festschrift für Horst Weinstock. Clausdirk Pollner, Helmut Rohlfing, and Frank-Rutger Hausmann, ed. Bonn, 1996. 183-94.

Lindahl, Carl, “Beowulf: Old Law, Internalized Feud.” Southern Folklore  53 (1996): 171-91.

Lindström, Bengt, "Beowulfiana Minora." Notes and Queries 59:3 (2012) 309-310.

Lionarons, Joyce Tally, The Medieval Dragon: the Nature of the Beast in Germanic Literature. Enfield Lock, Middlesex: Hisarlik, 1998.

________, “Beowulf: Myth and Monsters.” English Studies  77 (1996): 1-14.

________, “Bodies, Buildings, and Boundaries: Metaphors of Liminality in Old English and Old Norse Literature.” Essays in Medieval Studies  11 (1994): 43-50.

Littleton, C. Scott, "Theseus as an Indo-European Sword Hero, With an Excursus on Some Parallels between the Athenian Monster-slayer and Beowulf." Heroic Age 11 (2008).

Liuzza, Roy M., trans. Beowulf. Peterborough, Ontario, and New York: Broadview, 1999.

________, “On the Dating of Beowulf.” ‘Beowulf’: Basic Readings. Baker, ed. 281-302.

Livingston, Michael; Sutton, John William, "Reinventing the Hero: Gardner's Grendel and the Shifting Face of Beowulf in Popular Culture." Studies in Popular Culture 29:1 (2006): 1-16.

Lockett, Leslie, "The Role of Grendel's Arm in Feud, Law, and the Narrative Strategy of Beowulf." Latin Literature and English Lore. O'Brien O'Keeffe and Orchard, ed. 368-88.

Lord, Albert B., The Singer Resumes the Tale. Mary Louise Lord, ed. Ithaca, New York, and London: Cornell University Press, 1995.

________, “Beowulf and the Russian Byliny.” De Gustibus. Foley, ed. 304-23.

________, Epic Singers and Oral Traditions. Ithaca, New York, and London: Cornell University Press, 1991.

Louden, Bruce, “A Narrative Technique in Beowulf and Homeric Epic.” Oral Tradition  11 (1996): 346-62.

Love, Damian, "Hengist's Brood: Tennyson and the Anglo-Saxons." Review of English Studies 60:245 (2009): 460-74.

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O'Donnell, Daniel P., “The Collective Sense of Concrete Singular Nouns in Beowulf.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  92 (1991): 433-40.

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________, “Succession and Glory in Beowulf.” Journal of English and Germanic Philology  90 (1991): 491-504.

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Senra Silva, Immaculada, “The Rune Eþel and Scribal Writing Habits in the Beowulf Manuscript.” Neuphilologische Mitteilungen  99 (1998): 241-47.

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Standop, Ewald, “Alliteration und Akzent: schwere und leichte Verse im Beowulf.” Anglo-Saxonica. Grinda and Wetzel, ed. 167-79.

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________, “Beowulf 1259a: The Inherent Nobility of Grendel’s Mother.” English Language Notes  31 (1994): 13-25.

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_______, “Bad Breath at the Barrow Beowulf 2288a: Stonc ða æfter stane: The Implications of a Homiletic Perspective.” In Geardagum  20 (1999): 7-26.

_______, “Beowulf 301-308: the Mock-Heroic Arrival of the Hero.” English Language Notes  36.1 (1998): 1-8.

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________, “Power as a Measure of Humanism in Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.” Arthurian and Other Studies Presented to Shunichi Noguchi. Takashi Suzuki and Tsuyoshi Mukai, ed. Woodbridge and Rochester, New York, 1993. 1-13.

________, “Wulfgar at the Door? A Literary Solution to Beowulf 389-90.” English Language Notes  29.4 (1992): 1-9.

________, Literary Essays on Language and Meaning in the Poem Called Beowulf: Beowulfiana Literaria. Lewiston, Queenston, Lampeter: Mellen, 1992.

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