<b>A fresh approach to the construction of Anglo-Saxon England and its depiction in art and writing.</b><br><br>This book explores the ways in which early medieval England was envisioned as an ideal a placeless and a conflicted geography in works of art and literature from the eighth to the eleventh century and in their modern scholarly and popular afterlives. It suggests that what came to be called Anglo-Saxon England has always been an <i>imaginary</i> place an empty space into which ideas of what England was or should have been or should be have been inserted from the arrival of peoples from the Continent in the fifth and sixth centuries to the arrival of the self-named alt-right in the twenty-first. It argues that the political and ideological violence that was a part of the origins of England as a place and the English as a people has never been fully acknowledged; instead the island was reimagined as a chosen land home to a chosen people the <i>gens Anglorum</i>. Unacknowledged violence however continued to haunt English history and culture. Through her examination here of the writings of Bede and King Alfred the Franks Casket and the illuminated <i>Wonders of the East</i> and the texts collected together to form the <i>Beowulf</i> manuscript the author shows how this continues to haunt Anglo-Saxon Studies as a discipline and Anglo-Saxonism as an ideology from the antiquarian studies of the sixteenth century through to the nationalistic and racist violence of today.
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