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Prosody in medieval English and Norse

Part of the British Academy Monographs series
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How can we reconstruct the rhythms and cadences DS the prosody DS of past languages?

Prosody in Medieval English and Norse approaches this problem by comparing two closely related languages with a long written history in the Middle Ages.

Through a series of case studies on vowel reductions and alliterative verse forms, Kaster identifies important continuities in the internal rhythmic structure of words and explores the enduring role of the bimoraic trochee. The main rhythmic building block of these languages, the bimoraic trochee, shapes both linguistic change and poetic structure.

The bimoraic trochee played a defining role in the loss of many unstressed vowels that took place in English and Norse in the 6th and 7th centuries, and continued to influence vowel reductions in later English.

In alliterative poetry, the bimoraic trochee explains previously opaque restrictions against using certain words in certain metrical contexts, especially the controversial Kaluza's law in Beowulf and Craigie's law in the Poetic Edda.

Together, these case studies allow prosodic change and stability to be traced over time.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0197267467 / 9780197267462
Hardback
414.6
13/04/2023
United Kingdom
English
390 pages
24 cm
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Learn More