Cambridge University Press, 2006. — 231 pages. — ISBN13: 978-0-521-46575-5; ISBN13: 978-0-521-46970-8.
This is a book about ways of reading Old English, each of which presupposes a set of interpretative practices. Each of the essays which follow undertakes to describe and argue for a specific current approach (= a set of practices) with the understanding that reading within that approach produces a particular kind of outcome. In this sense, each approach might be imagined as a different sort of lens (perhaps even, at times, a filter) which permits the reader to visualize and comprehend differentially particular objects in a complex field. Each approach, whether it be through, for example, oral traditional criticism, source work, feminist criticism, or historicist analysis, constructs itself within two sets of conversations, one with the past from which it wishes to be distinguished, and one with the present, where it wishes to differentiate itself from other contemporary approaches. Thus, to understand an argument for something, it is necessary to understand the often unspoken conversations and quarrels that argument assumes. The most pressing among these exchanges concern the proper approach to and utility of the past, broadly conceived.
The comparative approach
Source study
Language matters
Historicist approaches
Oral tradition
The recovery of texts
At a crossroads: Old English and feminist criticism
Post-structuralist theories: the subject and the text
Old English and computing: a guided tour