1st Edition
Genesis Myth in Beowulf and Old English Biblical Poetry
List of Figures
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Ch. 1- The Angelic Myth in Genesis A and Genesis B
Background: Angelic Creation, Rebellion, and Fall in the Christian Tradition
Angelic Creation, Rebellion, and Fall in Genesis A and Genesis B
Satan and Hell in Genesis B
Ch. 2 Creation in Genesis A and Beowulf
Literary Background
The Creation in Genesis A
The Creation in Beowulf
Ch. 3 Adam and Eve’s Temptations and Transgression in the Genesis Poems
Background: Genesis B’s Interpolation into Genesis A and its Approach to Biblical Versification
Temptations and Transgression in Genesis B
Confession and Expulsion in Genesis A
Ch. 4 Cain’s Fratricide and Related Narratives in Genesis A and Beowulf
Literary and Exegetical Background
The Cain Myth in Genesis A
The Cain Myth in Beowulf
Ch. 5 The Great Flood in Genesis A and Beowulf
Exegetical and Literary Background
The Great Flood in Genesis A
The Drowning of the Giants in the Great Flood and its Significance in the context of Beowulf
Conclusion
Index
Biography
Joseph St. John completed his doctoral degree at the University of Malta in 2023. The focus of his research was the adaptation of Genesis themes in Old English poetry, specifically Genesis A, Genesis B, and Beowulf. He also published an article titled ‘The Meaning Behind Beowulf’s Beheading of Grendel’s Corpse’, on Leeds Medieval Studies, in 2021; a note titled ‘The Character Helle in De Resurrectione Domini, the Old English Cotton Vespasian D.xiv Version of Christ’s Descent into Hell in the Gospel of Nicodemus’, on ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews, in 2022; an article titled ‘Ac ic to þam grunde genge: an analogue for Genesis B, line 834a’, on The Explicator, which first appeared online in 2023, and an article titled ‘The Archetype in the Genesis A Adaptation of the Cainite Genealogy’, on ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews, again in 2023. Moreover, the author has delivered lectures about Beowulf, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and Chaucer’s early poetry at the University of Malta.






