Beowulf - Thug Notes Summary and Analysis

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
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    From plot debriefs to key motifs, Thug Notes’ Beowulf Summary & Analysis has you covered with themes, symbols, important quotes, and more. This week’s episode is Beowulf by Author(s) Unknown.
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Комментарии • 915

  • @4Mr.Crowley2
    @4Mr.Crowley2 4 года назад +518

    As a medievalist I started laughing so hard at his confusion about the author...”Beowulf...by...uhhhh...” Welcome to the Middle Ages my friends!

    • @lepmuhangpa
      @lepmuhangpa 3 года назад +3

      Hahaha

    • @speedwagon1824
      @speedwagon1824 2 года назад +4

      We knew who wrote different texts in the middle Ages much more than earlier times, especially before antiquity

    • @Heyitsnanalala
      @Heyitsnanalala 19 дней назад

      😂😂

  • @vincentvorse
    @vincentvorse 8 лет назад +2466

    If this guy were a High school teacher, a bet $10,000 he would never have a student pull a "sick day". In fact, they would probably petition to have his class go on longer than normal classes

    • @LuisCabrera-ll5rn
      @LuisCabrera-ll5rn 8 лет назад +25

      that would becoo

    • @Plankensen
      @Plankensen 8 лет назад +41

      I bet you they would still be sick of his face because they had to see it every monday morning

    • @ANT96-x8d
      @ANT96-x8d 7 лет назад +5

      Do Wizard's First Rule by Terry Goodkind

    • @joselopezmendez6145
      @joselopezmendez6145 7 лет назад +9

      Mr. Handel-Bar yeah but it would sure be weird to be the one white kid in the class

    • @VivoLaRihvolution
      @VivoLaRihvolution 6 лет назад +2

      Mr. Handel-Bar meh not thuggish enough

  • @SeresTheZocker
    @SeresTheZocker 8 лет назад +1102

    I love how we can talk about prose written in old English in an American ghetto slang and still get the point across

    • @nataliagarciahess3749
      @nataliagarciahess3749 5 лет назад +21

      It's actually verse, not prose, but yeah, I agree :)

    • @EliStettner
      @EliStettner 4 года назад +66

      African American Vernacular English

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 4 года назад +11

      @@EliStettner Thank you fine gentleman

    • @brentgould958
      @brentgould958 3 года назад +6

      I understand Beowulf better now.

    • @jfowler53
      @jfowler53 3 года назад +3

      This ain't nothin but a minstrel

  • @ilovepiedoyou2
    @ilovepiedoyou2 8 лет назад +627

    Beowulf test tomorrow, of course I had to watch the Thug Notes!

  • @outsidelo0kingin
    @outsidelo0kingin 9 лет назад +236

    I'm an English major and this guy literally saves my butt for every reading and comprehension quiz/test/exam!! Bless you!!

  • @Chuschannel
    @Chuschannel 8 лет назад +440

    Beowulf was a straight up gangsta.

  • @LadyFan05
    @LadyFan05 10 лет назад +537

    I LOVE THIS MAN!

    • @WisecrackEDU
      @WisecrackEDU  10 лет назад +167

      Thanks!

    • @2025-e4n
      @2025-e4n 7 лет назад +2

      Thank Mr.Bauer and Mr Salamon.....

    • @Joparkr
      @Joparkr 4 года назад

      I love him too

  • @ninjaduck30
    @ninjaduck30 10 лет назад +28

    This is literally how I passed my English test on Beowulf. Seriously I read through the whole thing and I barely had a concept of what was going on. So THANK YOU!!!

  • @leornendeealdenglisc
    @leornendeealdenglisc 9 лет назад +283

    Actually, the name Beowulf is a combination of Bee and hunter. Beo is bee in Old English, and Wulf can be Wolf but it can also mean hunter. Thus Bee-hunter, and what animal hunts after bees? A bear.
    To say man-wolf is ǷER-ƿulf, hence the modern day Werewolf. Wer is man in Old English and Wulf in this case, would mean wolf.

    • @cmustard599
      @cmustard599 7 лет назад +21

      Leornende Eald Englisc ...'bee hunter' would be consistent with the use of kennings in the text as well. I think the name has many interpretations and intentionally vague. Just as the bear will endure the wrath of bees to get honey, Beowulf is the archetypical hero who slays the monster to get the gold.

    • @ImGrayLikeTheColor
      @ImGrayLikeTheColor 6 лет назад +7

      He also was attacked by bees as a child giving him poor eyesight.

    • @gilbertoignacioaguirrevarg4550
      @gilbertoignacioaguirrevarg4550 6 лет назад +2

      The fuck you talkin' about

    • @ANT96-x8d
      @ANT96-x8d 6 лет назад +1

      One question:Who wrote Beowulf?

    • @1984Brandon
      @1984Brandon 5 лет назад +2

      ​@@ANT96-x8d As I recall if memory serves me correctly it was many people. It started out as somewhat of a cultural icon. When Troubadours were going around trying to inform Druids or Pagans of Christianity they also would use relatable homages, in one version when Grendel slaughtered the knights of Hrothgar but the King was unscathed, due to the throne being protected by Jesus Christ's holiness peace be upon him. I consider it like the Finnish Folk tale of Kalevala, Fins fighting CCCP back in the times of Pre European War might sing or chant as they go into battle; Or in Hong Kong a Chinese artisan might read up some Confucianism writings to inspire a building design as a contractor.

  • @Apkans
    @Apkans 9 лет назад +265

    I laughed in the face of this book and its 60 pages,
    mockingly I thought: finally a book that won't take me ages,
    but then the poem initiated and my ego deflated,
    "These sentences are longer than anything I've read!"
    so I tossed it aside and watched this video instead.

  • @SweetCaptain77
    @SweetCaptain77 10 лет назад +105

    You have no idea how helpful this was to me. Thanks a bunch.

    • @WisecrackEDU
      @WisecrackEDU  10 лет назад +41

      No prob

    • @viggipedia
      @viggipedia 9 лет назад +4

      +Wisecrack Can you do epic of gilgamesh? Being the oldest work of fiction counts for something I guess.
      Thanks for everything!

  • @talefromthegrandline
    @talefromthegrandline 9 лет назад +199

    Holy shit...I actually UNDERSTAND Beowulf now!

  • @RunItsTheCat
    @RunItsTheCat 9 лет назад +63

    Shieeeet, ain't nobody fuckin with death. NOBODY.

  • @jaccuse4086
    @jaccuse4086 8 лет назад +471

    "Beowulf by... uh..."
    ba dum tsss

    • @cutienerdgirl
      @cutienerdgirl 8 лет назад +14

      I was looking through the comments hoping someone said something about it!!😅

    • @Victor-zd1jr
      @Victor-zd1jr 7 лет назад +3

      The Tin Memesman i dont get iy

    • @bul13ts
      @bul13ts 7 лет назад +45

      Richard, Duke of York The story of Beowulf began as an oral tradition, passed down from one generation to the next by simply telling the tale, and teaching it to other storytellers who would embellish it as they saw fit. When it finally was written down, the story had already existed for centuries, with the name of its original author having long since been lost to time. What we have today are numerous translations courtesty of many noted authors and scholars, including Seamus Heaney and J.R.R. Tolkien, the latter of which famously lifted several narrative elements from this story for use in his own works.

    • @poweroffriendship2.0
      @poweroffriendship2.0 6 лет назад +9

      The Tin Memesman Well the author of Beowulf remained unknown to this day.

    • @swift3602
      @swift3602 4 года назад +1

      his father

  • @gadunka888
    @gadunka888 10 лет назад +359

    What's Beowulf's favourite TV show?
    How I Met Your Mother
    *runs away*

    • @patrickalexander3964
      @patrickalexander3964 10 лет назад +18

      ***** I think it was a reference to how Beowulf met Grendel's mother (and killed her).

    • @bul13ts
      @bul13ts 7 лет назад +3

      Even Beowulf doesn't like Beowulf (2016)

    • @zurieschwartz4101
      @zurieschwartz4101 Год назад

      Beowulf had 4 sons and 4 daughters according to genealogical records and his descendants live on through his daughters.

  • @smilingmushroom32
    @smilingmushroom32 10 лет назад +64

    finally. a channel thats ghetto, educational, and funny at the same time.
    well done.

  • @rolandguiscard
    @rolandguiscard 10 лет назад +21

    Not only is this hilarious and entertaining, it's highly educational.
    You're doing something truly valuable here. Keep it up!

  • @TLL555
    @TLL555 8 лет назад +20

    i just really need to point this out but while this interpretation of Beowulf's meaning holds some weight, it's about vikings and how they are most alive when they fight. It's not pride when Beowulf challenges Grendel and Grendel's mother all alone. When he promises King Hrothgar that he can and will kill Grendel it is not only a testament to his vitality but also a promise of how honorable a viking warrior he is by putting his life on the line like that. In that sense, the meaning of the name Beowulf can serve to refer to man's animal characteristics and how the urge to fight until your dying breath is a natural part of life. That is especially true when you take into account the opening verses that describe a viking funeral in which the previous king of the shieldlands gets put into a boat in armor and such, and that describe how honorable the king was in fighting until the very end (which is in essence the meaning of the viking funeral format). Interestingly enough though, the poem was likely written between 800 and 1100 by (a) christian monk(s) and despite that, they do not write it from a perspective that attacks paganism but clearly distinguishes Beowulf's pagan practices from God (there are allusions to God in the poem, that is) and it's especially interesting because the time it was written in was when the vikings invaded what is now the UK.

  • @AntipaladinPedigri
    @AntipaladinPedigri 11 лет назад +28

    Guys tell a "yo momma" joke. Grendel's momma appears to beat the sh*t out of everyone there. Best plot twist ever.

  • @LeonhardEuler1
    @LeonhardEuler1 10 лет назад +101

    You've mentioned Nietzsche in a number of these videos, so why not do an episode on something of his? Perhaps "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" or something?

    • @djqkronicles24
      @djqkronicles24 10 лет назад

      That's philosophy. Besides, Nietzsche wrote most of his other books, just to explain Zarathustra. In the 8 bit philisophy series, they might start with the classics, like Plato, and move down the line, making Nietzsche towards the end.

    • @LeonhardEuler1
      @LeonhardEuler1 10 лет назад

      Yeah, of course it is philosophy, but I still think it is sufficiently allegorical (etc) to fit nicely in this series.
      But yeah, I'd imagine Nietzsche will show up in the 8-bit philosophy series soon enough. I guess I just think it would be more fun to have the Thug character discuss it. ;)

    • @GeraldMcCray7stonesGFX
      @GeraldMcCray7stonesGFX 10 лет назад

      LeonhardEuler1
      His 8-bit Philosophy is awesome and episode 2 actually touches on Nietzsche

    • @LeonhardEuler1
      @LeonhardEuler1 10 лет назад +2

      Yep, it was quite good. I think Megaman is the perfect choice for discussing Nietzsche too. :)

    • @GeraldMcCray7stonesGFX
      @GeraldMcCray7stonesGFX 10 лет назад +2

      I confess I am not at all familiar with the guy, I didnt even know how to pronounce his name until this video!

  • @CSLucasEpic
    @CSLucasEpic 9 лет назад +117

    Could you do the Epic of Gilgamesh next?

    • @choueriito2548
      @choueriito2548 9 лет назад +3

      +Persona Ohnlyne I second this.

    • @druffner
      @druffner 8 лет назад +2

      same here

    • @yummi4tunekookie
      @yummi4tunekookie 8 лет назад +1

      +Persona Ohnlyne That would be fantastic!

    • @desra753
      @desra753 7 лет назад +1

      He did it!

    • @jeremybrown9611
      @jeremybrown9611 6 лет назад

      Yep I just watched it before this one, and it was good as always!

  • @stormbringerr7806
    @stormbringerr7806 10 лет назад +13

    you're hilarious wisecrack. keep em coming.i also liked your review of Dune.

  • @mccormit
    @mccormit 11 лет назад +2

    This is some of the coolest, most accurate and deep explanations of classics. and it's entertaining too. Keep it up man.

  • @CD-zg4tj
    @CD-zg4tj 10 лет назад +9

    I don't think people understand how awesome this video is!

  • @tinamichelle6969
    @tinamichelle6969 4 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for allowing us to experience your gift through these different stories. I have a greater understanding of the literature. My son loves to watch you too.

  • @hbrony1304
    @hbrony1304 10 лет назад +9

    I remember Beowulf being one of my absolute favorite reads in high school.

    • @poweroffriendship2.0
      @poweroffriendship2.0 6 лет назад +1

      H, Brony I guess Grendel's appearance in Beowulf is kinda more of minor antagonist than he already is in book based on the monster of the same name.

  • @tekobari
    @tekobari 10 лет назад +15

    40s fo' evvyone! I thought I would die laughing.

  • @juliansoria2040
    @juliansoria2040 8 лет назад +16

    shout out to my English teacher for telling me to watch this

  • @jamieford26
    @jamieford26 6 месяцев назад

    This is literally my college homework assignment. Hands down best educational video I’ve ever watched

  • @billoates406
    @billoates406 9 лет назад +21

    Watership down please! 🐰

  • @dorianvick8932
    @dorianvick8932 4 года назад +1

    This is a dope way of conveying great books, stories and providing solid analysis.

  • @Dysteleologist
    @Dysteleologist 9 лет назад +3

    Best summary I've seen yet! I definitely needed a few wisecracks to get through this godforsaken poem.

  • @tworavensread9806
    @tworavensread9806 11 лет назад +2

    I love this!!!! You're the best Sparky!

  • @theshuttergrind
    @theshuttergrind 10 лет назад +10

    I have been laughing for hours now. Thanks a lot.

  • @mdkkarl
    @mdkkarl 7 лет назад +2

    I just found this channel. This is helpful and hilarious. Love it.

  • @pinkjessjmb
    @pinkjessjmb 9 лет назад +6

    This guy needs more followers

  • @kenabbott8585
    @kenabbott8585 3 года назад +2

    For most of the history since we found the poem, people looked down on it--they figured it was something like a medieval Hardy Boys book; a paint-by-numbers style adventure for adolescents.
    It wasn't until JRR Tolkein wrote "Beowulf and the Critics," defending it as an absolute epic, that people started to take it seriously.

  • @milenasaakyan3805
    @milenasaakyan3805 9 лет назад +9

    YOU LITERALLY MADE ME PASS THANKS

  • @missyshrimp222
    @missyshrimp222 7 лет назад +1

    I loved this story back in high school!!! I remember by whole class and I had to write an essay about it and we had so much fun.

  • @rajarb2487
    @rajarb2487 9 лет назад +3

    you make literature even more interesting ! thanks homie ! :D

  • @williamblevins4313
    @williamblevins4313 11 лет назад

    thanks thug notes! I was going to ask you to do a video on Beowulf because me high school class is studying Beowulf. so thanks for helping a brother out!

  • @ombranox
    @ombranox 10 лет назад +4

    I could have sworn Beowulf was a kenning for BEAR. Beo- bee, and wulf... is wolf (representing a predator). Or, simply put, a predator of bees. Bears were scary, scary things, and common superstition was that saying its actual name was to invoke its appearance...

  • @immahuman9946
    @immahuman9946 10 лет назад

    i seriously listened to the first 7 seconds of the first vid of yours that i came across and hit subscribe. im spending all day tomorrow taking in all the epic Thug Notes. thank you for your awesomeness :)

  • @leornendeealdenglisc
    @leornendeealdenglisc 9 лет назад +25

    This is an interesting telling of Beowulf. Bear in mind though that Geatland is pronounced as Yeh-atland.
    Keep it up. :)

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 6 лет назад

      is pronounced like the in 'bad' when after though, which makes the 'y' sound as you said, so it'd be pronounced yat-land.

    • @brownladyjay0858
      @brownladyjay0858 6 лет назад +2

      I’m sure he’s aware the correct pronunciation’s however he’s telling it in a different type of slang...I just night time though it is much is you committing all wet he isn’t doing is actually better than cliff notes

  • @Lioness_Es
    @Lioness_Es 8 лет назад +2

    Wisecrack you got it goin' on brother! Keep up the good work!

  • @nebojsagalic4246
    @nebojsagalic4246 9 лет назад +5

    It`s a folk epic. It was not written by any single author. It was passed down from generation to generation with each bard adding or taking something away. Then some unnamed bard sorted it out to the point of it being a cohesive narrative, an then some monk wrote it down.

  • @moomoocachoo9025
    @moomoocachoo9025 11 лет назад

    Always look forward to your videos! Which one are you doing next? Also, would you be willing to do Flowers for Algernon?

  • @laurenbobo5953
    @laurenbobo5953 8 лет назад +5

    Could you do Sir Gawain and the Green Knight?

  • @ibrahimlatif10
    @ibrahimlatif10 3 года назад +1

    this is actually helping me, i was styuck on this topic at school and now, youve explained it rlly well, thank u my g

  • @brendenjay2118
    @brendenjay2118 9 лет назад +4

    Could you do The Canterbury Tales next?

  • @heavenrose2
    @heavenrose2 7 лет назад +1

    I LOVE THIS CHANNEL. BEOWULF MADE NO SENSE UNTIL I WATCHED THIS. THANK YOU!! 👏👏

  • @wojtekszeler6756
    @wojtekszeler6756 9 лет назад +4

    That helped my friend to pass the exams from british literature, thank you!

    • @MsLulu200
      @MsLulu200 9 лет назад +1

      My class is reading this story it's soo boring and I don't understand anything about this story ... :/ :( >:(

    • @CharlieUlivarri
      @CharlieUlivarri 9 лет назад

      rock starblow There is a lot of background in Anglo-Saxon tradition that emerges from the story. What Sparky covers in rulership is a part of it, but the greater part is the comitatus (relationship between the king and thane) that is at the core of Beowulf's and Hrothgar's relationship, especially when Hrothgar's wife becomes concerned for her children's inheritance. The giving king and loyal-unto-death vassals are challenged at the end when Beowulf's men flee from the dragon, and Beowulf dies because the system that they are to live by fails. There is also the wergild (life-price or death-price) that entails a payment for causing the death of a kinsman (accidental or intentional); if the wergild is not paid, then vengeance is demanded. This is why Hrothgar is a fallen king, he is powerless to exact the wergild from Grendel, this is why Grendel's mother comes to avenge his death, etc... There is also a nationalist element in the story as Beowulf, a foreigner, comes to battle Grendel since none of the warriors there can handle the job, foreshadowing in the story of Sigmund and the dragon that alludes to Beowulf's battle with the dragon, rich inclusion of pagan Anglo-Saxon mythology and Christianity, and so much more!

    • @MsLulu200
      @MsLulu200 9 лет назад

      Thnkx for helping me out !! I still don't like the story it's boring and too long !!

  • @PatchworkHeart
    @PatchworkHeart 7 лет назад +1

    Man, I'd love to see you review A Series of Unfortunate Events. The books are super sad, but SO BRUTAL AND GREAT

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean5280 8 лет назад +3

    Subtle! Straight away, he tips us off that he's using Seamus Heaney's translation.

    • @caitlintree3132
      @caitlintree3132 8 лет назад

      well that's the only translation........since the story had never actually been written down before

    • @yummi4tunekookie
      @yummi4tunekookie 8 лет назад

      Right, because "Hwæt! We Gar-Dena in gear-dagum / þeod-cyninga, þrym gefrunon, / hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon!" (as it was written down in about 1000 BCE) needs absolutely no translation for modern day speakers of English.

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 8 лет назад +2

      caitlin tree There have been many translations of Beowulf into modern English. I have four sitting on the table here beside me as I type this.

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 8 лет назад +2

      Benedick Cumbersnatch You've entirely missed my point. Who said anything about Beowulf needing no translation???
      Please re-read my initial comment, and then listen again to the opening of this video.
      Greg Edwards begins his summary by saying "So..." which is how Seamus Heaney translates "Hwæt." This translation of the Beowulf opening is highly unusual and was much remarked upon when it first appeared in 2000. Prior to this, all translations began with either an imperative, such as "Listen!" or "Lo!", or a salutation, such as "Hail!"
      May I suggest to you that it may be better to ask questions of your fellow RUclipsrs, rather than attempt to put them down?

    • @yummi4tunekookie
      @yummi4tunekookie 8 лет назад +4

      EyeLean5280 My apologies, EyeLean, but my response was towards caitlin; my fault for not tagging appropriately. I own Heaney's and Tolkien's translations myself. You're right, though, in that I should tone down my cynical snark if I truly intend to educate another or have an actual dialogue. I just get incredibly frustrated when commenters make confident (fallacious) assertions online, what with Google being RIGHT HERE.

  • @SophiaPo123
    @SophiaPo123 9 лет назад

    Sharing this with everyone I know. Geniusly composed and a VERY helpful review. Thug Notes, you get me "dawg."

  • @RTDice11
    @RTDice11 9 лет назад +42

    So he's a Medieval Kamina?

  • @pietrobianchi2334
    @pietrobianchi2334 3 года назад +1

    yours, and your contribution to literary culture is incredible, you are able to tell in a nice way the ancient masterpieces of history, in my opinion this is the perfect method that all HISTORICIANS AND LITERATORS SHOULD ADOPT, CONGRATULATIONS

  • @TAluclaire
    @TAluclaire 9 лет назад +3

    There are two important inaccuracies in this video which should be addressed. The first is the misconception that Beowulf left any of the Dragon's wealth with his people. Beowulf's military leadership was the only thing keeping the Swedes from invading Geatland, and the poem ends in sadness because it is telling of the end of the Geatish, who either moved to England and assimilated with the Angles/Saxons or were taken over and assimilated into the Swedes. All of the dragon's wealth was sent away on the pyre to keep the Swedish from attaining it, as well as to honor Beowulf's memory. The whole point of being generous with wealth was absolutely correct but that only applies when your kingdom isn't doomed. The poem even mentions how the gold is only symbolically valuable, anyway.
    The second is the point on the theme of pride in regards to Beowulf fighting Grendel unarmed. Grendel cannot be harmed by man-made metals but nobody thought to fight him unarmed or by slamming his arm in a door because normal people would think trying such things are insane. Beowulf has already been established to have superhuman strength by this point both in narration and his own stories of his exploits. By making a boast and fulfilling it Beowulf is shown in a positive light from the perspective of the narrator, not a negative one. By doing this he is in-tune with the Wyrd, or Fate, and was fated to kill Grendel so long as he went about it the right way.
    If you don't mind a bit of extra reading, here's an essay I wrote about Beowulf back in University that goes into detail on the historical and cultural contexts of the poem between the period in which it was thought to first have been composed and when the version we are familiar with was written down: docs.google.com/document/d/1DrwvXpDRVcxatzvY53oA6iQ5sxQvAmtIZphwbir8fMI/edit

    • @Michelle-pn9xt
      @Michelle-pn9xt 4 года назад +1

      We do not need to read your essay. Make your own video.

  • @Ambicatus
    @Ambicatus 10 лет назад

    This may be the best thing I've seen on RUclips since forever.

  • @matts.6234
    @matts.6234 10 лет назад +55

    In one adaptation of beowulf I read, it implied that beowulf said he hunted down grendel's mother, but she actually seduced him. Later in the story it tells how he actually got her pregnant and she gave birth to the dragon that kills him in the end.

    • @catazxy
      @catazxy 10 лет назад +18

      just like the movie

    • @MrNight48
      @MrNight48 10 лет назад +1

      Guess that wasn't the right one, but I am just as confused

    • @catazxy
      @catazxy 9 лет назад

      ***** unless you are a fan of both :))

    • @paul-hugoarcand5197
      @paul-hugoarcand5197 7 лет назад +2

      It's like that in the movie

    • @elijahfoltz3755
      @elijahfoltz3755 7 лет назад +1

      Yes, that is true in some adaptations, particularly the animated Robert Zemeckis film from 2007. In that, Grendel was actually the hideously deformed and diseased son of King Hrothgar who had been seduced by the sea hag (Grendel's mother). Then after Beowulf slew Grendel like a badass, she seduced him, and had another kid: the dragon that finally killed old King Beowulf (not before he killed it, of course).

  • @heinwilliamrich
    @heinwilliamrich 10 лет назад +1

    Thug Notes is seriously the best thing on RUclips.

  • @levongevorgyan6789
    @levongevorgyan6789 8 лет назад +5

    Didn't he fight the beast naked just to be fair?

  • @cortneydisselkoen289
    @cortneydisselkoen289 11 лет назад

    I look forward to Tuesday now! You are my favorite subscription. I would love to hear a whole reenactment done by you.

  • @anaverageblackgirl_
    @anaverageblackgirl_ 9 лет назад +53

    i just learned more about this poem than my teacher has taught me in the past two weeks. Thank you kind sir for helping prepare me for my test next week.

  • @MrCedarPawn
    @MrCedarPawn 9 лет назад +20

    Wait a minute. Beowulf fought Grendel unarmed because the beast was invulnerable to edged steel, and fought the dragon with no backup save Wiglaf because all his other warriors pussied out. In neither case was it about Beowulf being arrogant, this analysis is way off.

    • @JAYZM1YST3R3097
      @JAYZM1YST3R3097 9 лет назад +10

      Exactly, that was the way i interpreted it when i read it.
      i didnt make him out to be this huge arrogant warrior.

    • @TrevRockOne
      @TrevRockOne 9 лет назад +4

      You mean ThugNotes could be wrong?

    • @fmlAllthetime
      @fmlAllthetime 9 лет назад +2

      It's literature, it tends to be up to interpretation on issues not clearly stated. I don't know the story well, but from what he said and from what you said, it seems like either could be a valid explanation.

    • @HazyTown01
      @HazyTown01 9 лет назад

      TrevRockOne Dun Dun Duuuuuuunnnn!

    • @MrCedarPawn
      @MrCedarPawn 9 лет назад +3

      Eh, no, if you read it the reasons are very clear. Both are NOT valid according to interpretation.

  • @doverider2
    @doverider2 10 лет назад

    I love your vids! You are and awesome teacher!!! Your presentations are engaging, entertaining, and educational!! I've gotten fresh perspective on many of my favorite classics!! I'll be using your work to inspire my students!! Much Love!! Stay Awesome!!

  • @ParkerBarandon
    @ParkerBarandon 8 лет назад +3

    I read beowulf in 7th grade and it seemed very short... it was only like 108 pages

    • @archm6618
      @archm6618 7 лет назад

      That's because you read the shortened version that leaves stuff out

    • @Kirschbaumleiche
      @Kirschbaumleiche 7 лет назад

      Yeah, that's right. And belief me... you don't wanna read the long version, even not in modern English... It's awful as fuck. Especially if English isn't your mothertongue like in my case...

  • @marysims4096
    @marysims4096 3 года назад

    This man's videos need to be in all the urban schools. Total Lean On Me happening if they had teachers like this man.

  • @tierneytellsstories
    @tierneytellsstories 7 лет назад

    you have no idea how much this helped me. I did not wanted to read the book so I just read summaries off of shmoop. I love that you are doing this I just wish our teachers can let us watch these.

  • @lindagriggs8024
    @lindagriggs8024 4 года назад

    Surprised how much I appreciated this. THANK YOU

  • @ohsnapitzberil
    @ohsnapitzberil 9 лет назад +1

    you deserve waaayy more subscribers!!

  • @XxRocQstaRxX
    @XxRocQstaRxX 11 лет назад

    You never cease to amaze me. I'd love to see your take on Othelli, The Count of Monte Cristo, or The Hunchback of Notre Dame.

  • @elShit07
    @elShit07 11 лет назад

    Keep the vids coming you are spitting some serious knowledge

  • @denizcantulan4024
    @denizcantulan4024 5 лет назад

    "when it comes to laying that anglo-saxon poetry game" is the most beautiful start to a sentence i could ever imagine.

  • @Summdha
    @Summdha 9 лет назад +1

    Think i just stumbled across the most interesting educational channel EVER!

  • @lindseywillis6253
    @lindseywillis6253 9 лет назад +1

    This is the best summary I found!

  • @reesepuffs81
    @reesepuffs81 11 лет назад

    Longest 2 weeks of my life, welcome back!

  • @aya3520
    @aya3520 8 лет назад

    I love you wisecrack ever since the first time I've seen your videos, thaaaaaaanks ;)

  • @Thebesteverr007
    @Thebesteverr007 11 лет назад

    Would've loved to have this posted last week, we literally just covered this in school. Great episode, though!

  • @bobbyd1077
    @bobbyd1077 Месяц назад +1

    I miss these

  • @fictionfandoms1814
    @fictionfandoms1814 9 лет назад

    I love your analysis! I noticed you don't really go into detail on other information like the finnsburg episodes. Are there any analyses on that?

  • @BranchHeadJim
    @BranchHeadJim 11 лет назад

    Missed you last week, Doc. Thanks for the insight on Beowulf.

  • @wellsrn68
    @wellsrn68 11 лет назад

    Welcome back, I missed you!!! Now for the requests: Animal Farm, Invisible Man, The Scarlet Letter, Macbeth, Othello, The Count of Monte Cristo (books I love) & Moby Dick, The Old Man and The Sea(books I hated). If anybody could make Moby Dick & The Old Man & the Sea interesting it's you blood!! Make it happen playa!!

  • @marysims4096
    @marysims4096 3 года назад

    I have always loved your "courses" - you ain't never wrong.

  • @mccanlessdesign
    @mccanlessdesign 11 лет назад

    My Tuesdays are again complete - wonderful!

  • @bethanyfaubel6071
    @bethanyfaubel6071 11 лет назад

    At least every now and then, I must say, you are pretty darn awesome! I love all your work

  • @jinbae6076
    @jinbae6076 9 лет назад

    You should do more, helps me a bunch. Thanks!

  • @lizlockridge2033
    @lizlockridge2033 12 дней назад

    Thug Notes is such a "Gift" for teachers. I was not looking forward to teaching my "small group" class this epic poem, but once I realized there was a Thug Note Summary for Beowulf, I knew it would be ok - lol. Now, If you could do a lesson on Old English ...... :)

  • @DailyDaves
    @DailyDaves 11 лет назад

    Whyyyyyy haven't more people seen these videos! ?
    Please keep doing them and perhaps bring on someone good with marketing. This channel and everyone involved deserve far more views/subscribers. Ya hurrred!?

  • @Muscari
    @Muscari 11 лет назад

    Best channel on youtube, ya hear!

  • @TheCorkyr
    @TheCorkyr 10 лет назад

    Honestly, I love your videos and analysis of literature. As someone who studies Beowulf for a living, I want to share this with my students. Just beautiful; however, I would like to point out that the tightest translation of "Beowulf" is not "man wolf," as that would literally be "werwulf" in Anglo-Saxon (man/wer+wolf/wulf), the word from which the modern "werewolf" derives. Rather, the tightest translation of "Beowulf" is literally "bee-wolf," meaning "bear" (literally, a wolf who hunts bees - as in for honey - think Whinnie the Pooh). I hope this comment has been academically enlightening, keep the videos coming!

  • @LauraKennelly
    @LauraKennelly 11 лет назад

    Thanks so much for doing Beowulf. I see other great suggestions--. Looking forward to the next one.

  • @Mechristopheles
    @Mechristopheles 11 лет назад

    One of the best parts of the week.

  • @maryannes6426
    @maryannes6426 10 лет назад

    This man helps me learn this stuff. Brilliant!

  • @yinxybelle
    @yinxybelle 8 лет назад +2

    Wow. Cool analysis. I have an exam on this tomorrow. Wish me luck!

    • @harrycrome2794
      @harrycrome2794 8 лет назад +1

      Did you pass the Exam

    • @yinxybelle
      @yinxybelle 8 лет назад +2

      +Harry Crome Haven't seen the result though but I wrote the exam well. thanks for your concern :)

  • @allstartumbler123
    @allstartumbler123 9 лет назад

    this is possibly the best thing ive ever watched

  • @KimberTheRealGiver
    @KimberTheRealGiver 11 лет назад +1

    PLEASE do The Metamorphosis! I'd love to hear your take on it!

  • @jocelyng904
    @jocelyng904 3 года назад

    this was incredibly helpful, i now understand the book thank you!!

  • @pjpeej13
    @pjpeej13 11 лет назад

    Thanks so much man! I have a Beowulf quiz tomorrow!

  • @ashsteepingtea
    @ashsteepingtea 4 года назад

    This was actually super helpful for my English course lol
    Another entomological definition of Beowulf is Bee Wolf, a synonym for Bear apparently!