Skip to content

Anglo-Saxon Styles
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Anglo-Saxon Styles Hardcover - 2003

by Catherine E. Karkov (Editor); George Hardin Brown (Editor)


From the publisher

Art historian Meyer Schapiro defined style as "the constant form--and sometimes the constant elements, qualities, and expression--in the art of an individual or group." Today, style is frequently overlooked as a critical tool, with our interest instead resting with the personal, the ephemeral, and the fragmentary. Anglo-Saxon Styles demonstrates just how vital style remains in a methodological and theoretical prism, regardless of the object, individual, fragment, or process studied. Contributors from a variety of disciplines--including literature, art history, manuscript studies, philology, and more-- consider the definitions and implications of style in Anglo-Saxon culture and in contemporary scholarship. They demonstrate that the idea of style as a "constant form" has its limitations, and that style is in fact the ordering of form, both verbal and visual. Anglo-Saxon texts and images carry meanings and express agendas, presenting us with paradoxes and riddles that require us to keep questioning the meanings of style.

Details

  • Title Anglo-Saxon Styles
  • Author Catherine E. Karkov (Editor); George Hardin Brown (Editor)
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Pages 328
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher State University of New York Press
  • Date 2003-10
  • Illustrated Yes
  • ISBN 9780791458693 / 0791458695
  • Weight 1.18 lbs (0.54 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.24 x 6.16 x 0.9 in (23.47 x 15.65 x 2.29 cm)
  • Themes
    • Chronological Period: Medieval (500-1453) Studies
  • Library of Congress subjects Anglo-Saxons, England - Civilization - To 1066
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2002192958
  • Dewey Decimal Code 700.942

Media reviews

Citations

  • Choice, 03/01/2004, Page 1280

About the author

Catherine E. Karkov is Professor of Art at Miami University and the author of Text and Picture in Anglo-Saxon England: Narrative Strategies in the Junius 11 Manuscript, the editor of Basic Readings in Anglo-Saxon Archaeology, and the coeditor (with Robert T. Farrell and Michael Ryan) of The Insular Tradition, also published by SUNY Press.

George Hardin Brown is Professor of English at Stanford University and the author of Bede the Venerable and Bede the Educator.