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Neidorf, Leonard

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Neidorf

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Leonard

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Neidorf, Leonard

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    The Origins of Beowulf: Studies in Textual Criticism and Literary History
    (2014-06-06) Neidorf, Leonard; Harris, Joseph C.; Donoghue, Daniel G.; Fulk, Robert
    Beowulf is preserved in a single manuscript written out around the year 1000, but there are many reasons to believe that the poem was composed several centuries before this particular act of manual reproduction. Most significantly, the meter of Beowulf reveals that the poet regularly observed distinctions of etymological length that became phonologically indistinct before 725 in Mercia. This dissertation gauges the explanatory power of the hypothesis that Beowulf was composed about three centuries before the production of the extant manuscript. The following studies test the hypothesis of archaic composition by determining whether it is able to accommodate independent forms of evidence drawn from the fields of linguistics, textual criticism, and literary history.
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    Large-Scale Quantitative Profiling of the Old English Verse Tradition
    ((Springer) Nature, 2019-04-08) Neidorf, Leonard; Krieger, Madison; Yakubek, Michelle; Chaudhuri, Pramit; Dexter, Joseph
    The corpus of Old English (OE) verse is an indispensable source for scholars of the Indo-European tradition, early Germanic culture, and English literary history. Although the focus of sustained literary scholarship for over two centuries, OE poetry has not been subjected to corpus-wide computational profiling, in part because of the sparseness and extreme fragmentation of the surviving material. Here we report a detailed quantitative analysis of the whole corpus that considers a broad range of features reflective of sound, meter, and diction. This integrated examination of fine-grained features enabled us to identify salient stylistic patterns despite the inherent limitations of the corpus. In particular, we provide quantitative evidence consistent with the unitary authorship of Beowulf and the Cynewulfian authorship of Andreas, shedding light on two longstanding questions in OE philology. Our results demonstrate the usefulness of high-dimensional stylometric profiling for fragmentary literary traditions and lay the foundation for future studies of the cultural evolution of English literature.