Unriddling the Exeter Riddles

Author:   Patrick J. Murphy (Associate Professor of English, Miami University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271048420


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 November 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Unriddling the Exeter Riddles


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Author:   Patrick J. Murphy (Associate Professor of English, Miami University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9780271048420


ISBN 10:   0271048425
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 November 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Unriddling the Riddles 2. A Literal Reading of Riddle 57 3. Transformation and Textual Culture 4. Riddle 17 as Samson’s Lion 5. Innuendo and Oral Tradition 6. The Roots of Riddle 25 Afterword Bibliography Index

Reviews

Unriddling the Exeter Riddles is a dense and provocative read, saturated with ingenuity, offering new solutions for many riddles considered to have been properly solved. . . . The book s greatest contribution (and proof of its author s profound knowledge of riddling in general) is its comparative strategy, which urges us to look to other riddles from different eras and cultures. Seeing how medieval folk riddles with similar subject matter have been transformed by these writeras into literate and nuanced statements is enlightening and much needed. Sarah L. Higley, Speculum


[Murphy] successfully integrates folklore scholarship on contemporary riddles with literary and medievalist scholarship on early Medieval riddling to show that the Exeter riddles grew out of a vibrant tradition and were not created in isolation. Folklorists will find value in the way the book highlights the constant interplay between elite, popular, and vernacular culture. Most importantly, this book demonstrates why intertextual analysis of such texts is essential to understanding their surface answers and deeper cultural meaning. </p> Kristina Downs, <em>Journal of Folklore Research</em></p>


This is a wonderful new study of the Exeter Book riddles, packed full of insight. Its greatest strength lies in its innovative readings, which draw on an impressive knowledge of the range of analogues and insist that these riddles should be read both in the long folk tradition of oral riddling and through the literary tradition that was available in late Anglo-Saxon England. The whole study is presented in a lively style, illustrated by useful translations of the Old English that go some way to match the appeal of the subject matter. Jonathan Wilcox, University of Iowa


Unriddling the Exeter Riddles is a dense and provocative read, saturated with ingenuity, offering new solutions for many riddles considered to have been properly 'solved.' . . . The book's greatest contribution (and proof of its author's profound knowledge of riddling in general) is its comparative strategy, which urges us to look to other riddles from different eras and cultures. Seeing how medieval folk riddles with similar subject matter have been transformed by these writeras into literate and nuanced statements is enlightening and much needed. --Sarah L. Higley, Speculum


Most studies of the Exeter Book<em> </em>riddles treat them singly in order to offer a particular solution, playing the riddler's game in modern terms. In one of the few studies since Williamson's watershed edition that addresses this group of riddles as a whole, Patrick J. Murphy brings a new theory to bear. Positioning his study in response to both popular and learned riddling, he argues that the coherence of many of the Old English riddles is shaped by extended implicit metaphors; he calls this shaping 'focus.' After providing a lively summary of previous practice in his introduction, and laying the groundwork there for his new theory, in chapter 1, he explains the theory in lucid detail, with much attention to oral forms of riddling. He uses the focus idea in chapter 2 to propose a new metonymic meaning for the 'dark swarms' of Riddle 57, and in chapter 3 he shows how his method enriches even those riddle solutions that scholars generally agree about. Chapter 4 argues that the underlying focus of Riddle 17 (about bees) is a well-known biblical story, and chapter 5 addresses the 'sex riddles, ' making the point that focus is not necessarily fixed; a riddle may drift in and out of its focus. Chapter 6 demonstrates this by peeling the layers off Riddle 25, in which a fluidly gendered onion takes its 'caustic revenge.'</p> The author has clearly enjoyed following the dark tracks of these riddles (with far more complexity than suggested above), as will readers both new and old in the study of enigmatics and Old English poetry. The approach offered here, specific to the construction of the Exeter Book riddles, makes the task of unriddling them more engaging and intriguing than ever. </p>--Marijane Osborn, University of California, Davis</p>


Author Information

Patrick J. Murphy is Assistant Professor of English at Miami University.

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