A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English Literature

This paper explores the results of a pilot study that made use of corpus linguistic and other big data tools to explore the literary and cultural function of knowledge in Old English literature. In particular, it focusses on Bad Knowledge, knowledge that lay outside the confines of social acceptabi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rían Boyle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediuno. Ediciones de la Universidad de Oviedo 2025-07-01
Series:SELIM
Subjects:
Online Access:https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/SELIM/article/view/22305
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849222522427408384
author Rían Boyle
author_facet Rían Boyle
author_sort Rían Boyle
collection DOAJ
description This paper explores the results of a pilot study that made use of corpus linguistic and other big data tools to explore the literary and cultural function of knowledge in Old English literature. In particular, it focusses on Bad Knowledge, knowledge that lay outside the confines of social acceptability, and that was used to label people, objects or ideas as evil. Knowledge is a complicated idea in the medieval period, and the discourses around the moral qualitites of knowledge can be traced from antiquity, through to Ælfric of Eynsham, and beyond. However, there exists no easily discernible set of sources that describe epistemological attitudes in vernacular Early English writing. As such, this paper breaks from traditional close reading practices, and turns to a novel, data-based, computational methodology to examine nearly two hundred sentences from ninety-seven different texts, all of which are related to Bad Knowledge. In doing so, it attempts to piece together a framework for what Bad Knowledge may have looked like in the Early English period, and explore the broader relationship of the connections between knowledge, order, and authority. Additionally, it seeks to demonstrate the relevance of computational methods to Old English, and provide a launchpad for future work.
format Article
id doaj-art-e5b776692f9f4262aa2fbe272f366801
institution Kabale University
issn 1132-631X
2792-3878
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Ediuno. Ediciones de la Universidad de Oviedo
record_format Article
series SELIM
spelling doaj-art-e5b776692f9f4262aa2fbe272f3668012025-08-26T05:03:34ZengEdiuno. Ediciones de la Universidad de OviedoSELIM1132-631X2792-38782025-07-01301A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English LiteratureRían Boyle0Trinity College Dublin This paper explores the results of a pilot study that made use of corpus linguistic and other big data tools to explore the literary and cultural function of knowledge in Old English literature. In particular, it focusses on Bad Knowledge, knowledge that lay outside the confines of social acceptability, and that was used to label people, objects or ideas as evil. Knowledge is a complicated idea in the medieval period, and the discourses around the moral qualitites of knowledge can be traced from antiquity, through to Ælfric of Eynsham, and beyond. However, there exists no easily discernible set of sources that describe epistemological attitudes in vernacular Early English writing. As such, this paper breaks from traditional close reading practices, and turns to a novel, data-based, computational methodology to examine nearly two hundred sentences from ninety-seven different texts, all of which are related to Bad Knowledge. In doing so, it attempts to piece together a framework for what Bad Knowledge may have looked like in the Early English period, and explore the broader relationship of the connections between knowledge, order, and authority. Additionally, it seeks to demonstrate the relevance of computational methods to Old English, and provide a launchpad for future work. https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/SELIM/article/view/22305Old EnglishCorporaKnowledgeEpistemologyCorpus LinguisticsMedieval England
spellingShingle Rían Boyle
A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English Literature
SELIM
Old English
Corpora
Knowledge
Epistemology
Corpus Linguistics
Medieval England
title A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English Literature
title_full A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English Literature
title_fullStr A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English Literature
title_full_unstemmed A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English Literature
title_short A Thought Too Far: A Case for a Corpus Approach to Bad Knowledge in Old English Literature
title_sort thought too far a case for a corpus approach to bad knowledge in old english literature
topic Old English
Corpora
Knowledge
Epistemology
Corpus Linguistics
Medieval England
url https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/SELIM/article/view/22305
work_keys_str_mv AT rianboyle athoughttoofaracaseforacorpusapproachtobadknowledgeinoldenglishliterature
AT rianboyle thoughttoofaracaseforacorpusapproachtobadknowledgeinoldenglishliterature