Online Articles and Further Reading
Oxford users should look at the Article Vault for online versions of some more of the pieces below: Select Article Vault [OXFORD UNIVERSITY MEMBERS ONLY].
Some articles are available via JSTOR or other online repositories.
- Beaston, Lawrence. "The Wanderer's Courage." Neophilologus 89.1 (2005): 119-37.
- Bjork, Robert E. "Sundor æt rune: the voluntary exile of the Wanderer." Neophilologus 73.1 (1989): 119-129.
- Bragg, Lois. "Two Masterpieces." The Lyric Speakers of Old English Poetry. Rutherford: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1991. 121-135.
- Campbell, A. Old English Grammar. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1959.
- Champion, Margret Gunnarsdottir. "From Plaint to Praise: Language as Cure in The Wanderer'." Studia Neophilologica 69.2 (1997): 187-202.
- Clemoes, Peter. "Mens absentia cognitans in The Seafarer and The Wanderer." Medieval Literature and Civilization: Studies in Memory of G. N. Garmonsway. Eds. D. A. Pearsall and R. A. Waldron. London: Athlone Press, 1969. 62-77.
- Conde Silvestre, Juan C. "The Wanderer and The Seafarer: A Bibliography 1971-1991." SELIM: Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature 2 (1992): 170-86.
- Cook, Patrick. "Woriað þa winsalo: The Bonds of Exile in 'The Wanderer'." Neophilologus 80.1 (1996): 127-37.
- Cross, J. E. "On the Genre of The Wanderer." Neophilologus 45 (1961): 63-75.
- Dean, Christopher. "Weal Wundrum Heah, Wyrmlicum Fah and the Narrative Background of The Wanderer." Modern Philology 63.2 (1965): 141-43.
- Diekstra, F. N. M. "The Wanderer 65b-72: the passions of the mind and the cardinal virtues." Neophilologus 55 (1971): 73-88.
- Dunning, T. P., and A. J. Bliss. The Wanderer. Methuen's Old English library. London: Methuen, 1969.
- Elliott, R. V. W. "The Wanderer's Conscience." English Studies 39 (1958): 193-200.
- Fowler, Roger. "A Theme in The Wanderer." Medium Aevum 36 (1967): 1-14.
- Gordan, Ida L. "Traditional Themes in The Wanderer and The Seafarer." Review of English Studies 5 (1954): 1-13.
- Greenfield, Stanley B. "The Formulaic Expression of the Theme of 'Exile' in Anglo-Saxon Poetry." Speculum 30 (1955): 200-06.
- Greentree, Rosemary. "The Wanderer's Horizon: a note on ofer waþema gebind." Neophilologus 86.2 (2002): 307-09.
- Griffith, Mark S. "Does 'Wyrd Bið Ful Aræd' Mean 'Fate Is Wholly Inexorable'?" Studies in English Language and Literature: "Doubt Wisely". Eds. M. J. Toswell and E. M. Tyler: Routledge, London, 1996. 133-56.
- Harbus, Antonina. "Deceptive Dreams in The Wanderer." Studies in Philology 93.2 (1996): 164-79.
- Hill, Thomas D. "The Unchanging Hero: a stoic maxim in The Wanderer and its contexts." Studies in Philology 101.3 (2004): 233-49.
- Hollowell, Ida Masters. "On the Identity of the Wanderer." The Old English Elegies: New Essays in Criticism and Research. Ed. Martin Green. Rutherford, Fairleigh Dickinson UP, 1983. 82-95.
- Horgan, A. D. "The Wanderer - a Boethian Poem?" Review of English Studies 38 (1987): 40-46.
- Huppé, B. F. "The Wanderer: theme and structure." Journal of English and Germanic Philology 42 (1943): 516-538.
- Liuzza, R. M. "The Tower of Babel: The Wanderer and the Ruins of History." Studies in the Literary Imagination 36.1 (2003): 1-35.
- Lumiansky, R. M. "The Dramatic Structure of the Old English Wanderer." Neophilologus 34 (1950): 104-112.
- Millns, Tony. "The Wanderer 98: weal wundrum heah wyrmlicum fah." Review of English Studies n. s. 28 (1977): 431-438.
- Mitchell, Bruce. "Some Syntactical Problems in The Wanderer." Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 69 (1968): 172-198.
- North, Richard. "Boethius and the Mercenary in The Wanderer." Pagans and Christians: The Interplay between Christian Latin and Traditional Germanic Cultures in Early Medieval Europe. Eds. T. Hofstra, L. A. J. R. Houwen and A. A. MacDonald. Mediaevalia Groningana 16: Forsten, Groningen, 1995. 71-98
- Palmer, James M. "Compunctio and the Heart in the Old English Poem The Wanderer." Neophilologus 88.3 (2004): 447-60.
- Pasternack, Carol Braun. "Anonymous Polyphony and The Wanderer's Textuality." Anglo-Saxon England 20 (1991): 99-122.
- Pope, John C. "Dramatic Voices in The Wanderer and The Seafarer." Franciplegius: Medieval and Linguistic Studies in Honor of Francis Peabody Magoun, Jr. Eds. Jess B. Bessinger, Jr. and Robert P. Creed. New York: NYU Press, 1965. 164-193.
- Prins, A. A. "The Wanderer (and The Seafarer)." Neophilologus 48 (1964): 237-51.
- Richman, Gerald. "Speaker and Speech Boundaries in The Wanderer." Journal of English and Germanic Philology 81.4 (1982): 469-479.
- Rosier, James L. "The Literal-Figurative Identity of The Wanderer." PMLA 79 (1964): 366-9.
- Selzer, John L. "The Wanderer and the Meditative Tradition." Studies in Philology 80.3 (1983): 227-237.
- Shippey, T. A. "The Wanderer and The Seafarer as Wisdom Poetry." Companion to Old English Poetry. Eds. Henk Aertsen and Rolf H. Bremmer, Jr. Vrije UP, Amsterdam, 1994. 145-58.
- Smithers, G. V. "The Meaning of The Seafarer and The Wanderer (Pt. 1)." Medium Aevum 26 (1957): 137-153.
- ---. "The Meaning of The Seafarer and The Wanderer (Pt. 2)." Medium Aevum 28 (1959): 1-22.
- ---. "The Meaning of The Seafarer and The Wanderer: appendix." Medium Aevum 28 (1959): 99-105.
- Stanley, E. G., 'Old English Poetic Diction, and the Interpretation of The Wanderer, The Seafarer and The Penitent's Prayer', Anglia 73 (1955), 413-66.
- Timmer, B. J. "The Elegaic Mood in Old English Poetry." English Studies 24 (1942): 33-44.
- Woolf, Rosemary. "The Wanderer, The Seafarer, and the Genre of Planctus." Anglo-Saxon Poetry: Essays in Appreciation for John C. McGalliard. Eds. Lewis E. Nicholson and Dolores Warwick Frese. Notre Dame, U of Notre Dame P, 1975. 192-207.