For many years there has been lively debate about the 'orality' or
'literacy' of Old English verse: about whether the Old English
verse which has come down to us is primarily the product of oral
composition or primarily written, insofar as it is transmitted only
in manuscript. The present book throws light on this question by
drawing our attention to a largely unexplored body of evidence,
namely the graphic realization of Old English verse in the
surviving manuscripts - how it is set out spatially, how it is
marked up for reading with punctuation of various kinds. Professor
O'Keeffe shows that by the late tenth century scribes had
apparently ceased to alter the poems which they were transcribing
by recourse to residual orality, and had begun to copy verbatim the
poetic text before them. The entire orality-literacy debate has
been lifted on to a new plane; the book makes a major contribution
to our understanding of the way Old English verse has come down to
us.
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