Wisdom poetry

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Literary scholars have identified at least two historical types of poetry as wisdom poetry. The first kind of wisdom poetry was written in the ancient Middle East and, according to some scholars, is found in the Hebrew Bible. Scholars of medieval literature have also termed some poems "wisdom poetry".

Ancient Judaism[]

Sigmund Mowinckel argues that wisdom poetry, encapsulated mainly in sayings or proverbs, was widespread in antiquity. Suggesting that wisdom poems were written in Egypt, Babylonia, and Canaan, Mowinckel identifies the influence of wisdom poetry on psalms.[1] Hermann Gunkel also identifies wisdom poetry (Weisheitsdichtung) as a psalmic genre.[2]

Middle Ages in Europe[]

Wisdom poems were written in Old English. Scholar Paul Battles identifies wisdom poetry as one of three genres of Old English poetry; the others are elegy and epic.[3] A 1998 anthology of Old English poems describes the genre as a "miscellaneous collection of works whose teaching is partly Christian, partly secular".[4] The editors group riddles, "succinct formulations of traditional wisdom", and "metrical charms" under the wisdom poetry heading.[4]

Carolyne Larrington, whose study A Store of Common Sense compares Old English and Old Icelandic (or Old Norse) wisdom poetry, defines a wisdom poem as one that "exists primarily to impart a body of information about the condition of the world ... or about the past".[5] She describes Maxims I, or Exeter Maxims,[6] as an example of Old English wisdom poetry, and Vafþrúðnismál and Grímnismál as Norse examples.[5]

Dan Pagis identifies Samuel ibn Naghrillah as an originator of the wisdom poetry genre.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ Mowinckel 1962, p. 105.
  2. ^ Johnson, A. R. (1961). "The Psalms". In Rowley, H. H. (ed.). The Old Testament and Modern Study: A Generation of Discovery and Research. Oxford University Press. p. 177. OCLC 1245625555.
  3. ^ Battles, Paul (2014). "Toward a Theory of Old English Poetic Genres: Epic, Elegy, Wisdom Poetry, and the "Traditional Opening"". . 111 (1): 1–33. ISSN 0039-3738. JSTOR 24391997.
  4. ^ a b Olsen & Raffel 1998, p. 107.
  5. ^ a b Larrington 1993, p. 1.
  6. ^ O'Camb, Brian (June 2009). "Bishop Æthelwold and the Shaping of the Old English Exeter Maxims". English Studies. 90 (3): 253–273. doi:10.1080/00138380902796714. ISSN 0013-838X.
  7. ^ Pagis 1991, pp. 15–16.

Sources[]

Further reading[]

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