Susan Signe Morrison's Blog, page 2

December 2, 2020

Tolkien and C. S. Lewis: Fantasy’s Global Influence

I highly recommend this article by Maria Sachiko Cecire in Aeon: “Empire of fantasy.” As the description suggests, Tolkien and Lewis’s influence extends to today. “By conquering young minds, the writing of J R R Tolkien and C S Lewis worked to recapture a world that was swiftly ebbing away.” Addressing issues as wide-ranging as Oxford education and racist appropriation of medieval symbols, Cecire is thought-provoking about important issues.





[image error]

From the British Library.
https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/map-of-the-middle-earth


 


“Tolkien and Lewis identified salvation in the authentic, childlike enjoyment of adventure and fairy stories, especially ones set in medieval lands. And so, armed with the unlikely weapons of medievalism and childhood, they waged a campaign that hinged on spreading the fantastic in both popular and scholarly spheres. Improbably, they were extraordinarily successful in leaving far-reaching marks on the global imagination by launching an alternative strand of writing that first circulated amongst child readers.”


 


 


The article was adapted from material published in Re-Enchanted: The Rise of Children’s Fantasy Literature in the Twentieth Century (2019) by Maria Sachiko Cecire.





 

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 02, 2020 08:24

January 18, 2020

Sad New: The Passing of Christopher Tolkien

It’s sad news to hear of Christopher Tolkien’s death. He kept the flame of his father’s legacy alive and was in his own right a mapmaker, scholar, and writer.


[image error]

Map credited to Christopher Tolkien. From the British Library.



Read more about Christopher and his legacy here.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 18, 2020 12:36

December 8, 2019

My Amazing Students…Yet Again!

[image error]

Emily Sawyer with her amazing artwork.


My students never fail to amaze, astound, and astonish me. Whether it was a poem fashioned with alliteration and pathos or a gaffaw-inducing Leechbook for college students, my students are valiant thegns and wise warriors.


 


 


They made art, such as the painstaking embroidery that portrays the dragon, Beowulf, Grendel’s Mother, and Grendel’s arm, as Claire did.







[image error]

Emma and her collage depicting good versus evil.


Emma made a collage dividing good and evil. Kyle made us roar with laughter with his “newspaper,” The Heorot Herald. It included tidbits on how to stop Grendel’s arm from rotting in the rafters and also a “Missed Connection” for Unferth, who promised to be reading Pride and Prejudice! A parody requires the writer to understand the original perfectly and is a lot of work–even if the result is to die for!


[image error]

Kyle and his hysterical “newspaper,” The Heorot Herald.


[image error]

Kandi and her astounding calligraphy of a beautiful, well-researched story. Her brother hand-sewed the book and its his leatherwork!!!!


Kandi fashioned a book with her own calligraphy and story, interlacing The Wife’s Lament with her own story inspired by historical characters. I think it should be a novel or series. And her brother made the leather-bound book with vellum. Truly mind-blowing!


 


 


 


I’m so grateful to my class for creatively showing how Old English material can be refashioned for today’s world. James made a D & D Beowulf style that was jaw-dropping in its intricate detail.


 

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 08, 2019 11:59

October 24, 2019

Old English Risotto and Grendel’s Dinner for One

[image error]

The head peaceweaver, Rachel


Old English Risotto and Grendel’s Dinner for One? Such is the daily fare of the humble Old English professor.


My student, Rachel, wove a space of peace at the beginning of class in our “meadhall”. She served lamb cooked in berries, whole wheat pancakes (barley was not available), and fresh berries.


Rachel poured mead (well, apple juice) into our cups as she urged us to make boasts. I got a “gold” ring for boasting that I would do my grading.


[image error]

A golden ring for my boasting to finish grading


Here is a video of how Rachel made her food. With ambient medieval music!







[image error]

Lauren barley pearls (Old English risotto!)


Lauren made an Old English risotto out of barley pearls and bacon. You can use bacon bits just like in the pre-Conquest period

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 24, 2019 09:32

August 21, 2018

Grendel’s Mother in Fascist Italy: “Beowulf” in a Catholic Youth Publication

[image error]

Cover of the 1950 Italian reprint of the original.


I’m delighted that my article “Grendel’s Mother in Fascist Italy: Beowulf in a Catholic Youth Publication,” has just been published in the International Journal of Comic Art. This essay focuses on a 1940-41 Italian comic book version by Enrico Basari (author) and Kurt Caesar (illustrator). An anti-semitic portrayal of Grendel’s Mother grows out of German views of Beowulf in the 1930s.


 


 


[image error]

Cover of the 1955 Brazilian Portuguese translation.


The anti-semitic overtones present in German Beowulf youth translations and adaptations sympathetic to Nazi German propaganda, produced in the decade before and simultaneously with the publication of the comic under scrutiny here, likewise crop up under the Italian fascist reign. The fraught nature of Grendel’s Mother takes on insidious dimensions in Enrico Basari’s Beowulf. Leggenda cristiana dell’antica Danimarca, appearing in serial form from Oct. 5, 1940-Jan. 25, 1941.


It was featured in Il Vittorioso, a Catholic youth publication, “a nationalist publication often distributed through Catholic parishes” (Calderón, 2007:112), that attempted to go beyond mere Fascist propaganda for young people. Just how could an anti-semitic inflected Beowulf comic have affected youth readers?


Read the full article here: Morrison IJOCA Grendel’s Mother in Fascist Italy.


Full Citation of article

Susan Signe Morrison. “Grendel’s Mother in Fascist Italy: Beowulf in a Catholic Youth Publication.”International Journal of Comic Art (IJOCA) 20.1 (2018): 331-348.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 21, 2018 11:53

May 1, 2018

April 6, 2018

FaceTiming from the Anglo-Saxon Period

[image error]

My and my partner in crime, Lorraine Stock


When Dr. Lorraine Stock, Professor of English at the University of Houston, invited me to come speak about my novel, Grendel’s Mother: The Saga of the Wyrd-Wife, I was thrilled. She wanted me to engage with her students who were reading Beowulf and Beowulf adaptations. I gave a lecture entitled: “Grendel’s Mother: How Silenced Women Speak Through Historical Fiction.”


 


Additionally, I attended her class to answer their questions (and sign their books!). But things don’t always go the way you expect them to.


[image error]

Sadie Hash, intrepid graduate student and cool-as-a-cucumber driver as I FaceTime with Lorraine’s class


Intrepid University of Houston grad student Sadie Hash scooped me up after my much delayed (4 hours) flight. I FaceTimed with Lorraine’s class as Sadie coolly drove to campus, where another student, Travis, whisked me away from curb to classroom to perform live.


Somehow being late was all to the good. The students were a bit intimidated to meet a real live author. But after FaceTiming with me for half an hour as we puzzled over the sound quality of the connection and they got a glimpse of the blue and green streaks in my hair, they relaxed.






[image error]

Engaging with the audience


Then, Lorraine had fashioned a convivial mead (wine) hall for my lecture with warm and responsive guests. I spoke to undergraduate and graduate students, as well as faculty. It was an utter delight to converse with Anglo-Saxonist John McNamara, whose 2005 translation of Beowulf is a Barnes and Noble Classic.


[image error]

You can find this book at many outlets.


We listened to Sarah McSweeney’s poignant rendition of Helga’s Song from my book.



In a wonderful surprise, a dear friend, Sabrina Martinez, was able to attend my talk.


[image error]

A great surprise! My friend from Swarthmore College Alumni Council (now she’s on the Board!), Sabrina Martinez. It was a thrill she could attend and we could chit-chat late into the night


That was a good day.


[image error]

Moses before the Burning Bush by Raphael


The next afternoon, after having a delightful time filming an interview with Lorraine  and conversing with faculty and students, Lorraine, Sadie, and I made it to one of my favorite museums: the Museum of Fine Arts Houston.


[image error]

Studies of Feet by Bartolomeo Passarotti


Most amusing was our conversation about Rubens’ Leda and the Swan.


[image error]

Leda and the Swan by Rubens


The closer you look, the more it strikes the viewer as a tad…kinky. We were very giggly.


[image error]

Leda and the Swan by Rubens, close up.


Art–whether written or visual or musical–continues to inspire, bringing us together in convivial spaces of exchange and dynamic warmth. Thanks to Lorraine and her students for fostering such a delightful climate and partnership!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 06, 2018 12:51

February 22, 2018

“I Love My School” in Runic Letters…and Harry Potter’s Scar

[image error]I love my school, writes one 4th grader. Nothing unusual in that. Except she writes it…in runes!!!


How do kids learn to write runic letters? Through the wonderful Young Writers’ Workshop that takes place every year at Travis Heights Elementary School. Not only do I love this school because my own kids had been pupils there, but because it continues to be an active part of my life. These 3rd-5th graders have the opportunity to work with writers from all fields–playwrights, business/tech writers, songwriters…and medievalists!


[image error]

Pupils writing imaginative and fanciful tales.


The other thing I learned today: one pupil was looking at the runic alphabet and we were discussing how “Z” is really complicated. But “S,” I said, “looks like a lighting bolt.” The pupil said, “It looks like Harry Potter’s scar!” All these years, and I never made that connection before: his scar DOES look like the runic S.


I hope I can keep learning from these amazing kids. One added treat: I was in the room with the wonderful 3rd grade teacher — who happens to be the mom of my son’s dear friend. Happy day!


[image error]

Using runes as models


 

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 22, 2018 10:53

February 20, 2018

Haunting Word from Old English

wer-genga, m.n: a stranger who seeks protection in the land to which he has come. [WAIR-yen-ga]


via wer-genga — Old English Wordhord


Old English Wordhord sends a daily word. Somehow, wer-genga tantalizes. Aren’t we all strangers seeking protection at some point in our lives? Let’s show compassion to our fellow strangers, making us compatriots with everyone.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 20, 2018 12:23

January 30, 2018

Grendel’s Mother: A Student Doodle Edition — Dutch Anglo-Saxonist


For a bonus question on their exam, my students used their artistic talents to draw their own rendition of Grendel’s mother from the Old English poem Beowulf.


via Grendel’s Mother: A Student Doodle Edition — Dutch Anglo-Saxonist

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 30, 2018 07:10