Helen Damico

Helen Damico is a scholar of Old English and Old English literature. She received her Ph.D. from New York University in 1980, and is a professor emerita at the University of New Mexico, where she began teaching in 1981 and founded the Institute for Medieval Studies. The author of Beowulf's Wealhtheow and the Valkyrie Tradition, Damico has made important contributions to the study of women in Old English and Old Norse literature, and her work on Wealhþeow is frequently cited.[1][2][3] She saw representations of the valkyrie in both Wealhþeow and Grendel's Mother Damico sees in the Old English poem Beowulf (c. 700–1000 AD).[4]

Books authored and edited

Monographs

Edited collections

Essays

References

  1. Carruthers, Leo (2011). "Rewriting Genres: Beowulf as Epic Romance". In Leo Carruthers. Palimpsests and the Literary Imagination of Medieval England: Collected Essays. Raeleen Chai-Elsholz, Tatjana Silec. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 139–56. ISBN 9780230118805.
  2. Hill, John M (2009). Narrative Pulse of Beowulf: Arrivals and Departures. U of Toronto P. p. 65. ISBN 9781442691940.
  3. Chickering, Howell (2009). "Poetic Exuberance in the Old English Judith". Studies in Philology. 106 (2): 119–36. JSTOR 25656006.
  4. Marshall, David W. (2010). "Getting Reel with Grendel's Mother: Abject Maternal and Social Critique". In Karl Fugelso. Defining Neomedievalism(s). Boydell & Brewer. pp. 135–59. ISBN 9781843842286. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  5. Clogan, Paul Maurice (1995). "Rev. of Heroic Poetry in the Anglo-Saxon Period". Medievalia et Humanistica. 22: 229–230. ISBN 9780847680993. Retrieved 17 February 2015.

External links

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