‘Eald to New’ was hosted by the School of English, University College Cork, on June 5-7 2014 and organized by Tom Birkett and Kirsty March-Lyons. It consisted of three main events: a graduate workshop, a public poetry evening and a two-day conference. The event sought to bring together academics and creative practitioners working with Old English, Old Irish and Old Norse poetry, in order to encourage collaboration and advance our under-standing of the practical, theoretical and socio-cultural aspects of the translation process. It also addressed the pedagogical considerations of teaching translation and using translated texts such as Heaney’s Beowulf within the academy. The Irish Research Council, the Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature, the School of English, University College Cork
and UCC’s Information Services Strategic Fund, as well as the Forum for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in Ireland, provided generous funding for the three day event.
The graduate workshop on creative translation was conducted by the editors of the The Word Exchange: Anglo-Saxon Poems in Translation – Greg Delanty and Michael Matto – and by Lahney Preston-Matto, the most recent translator of the Old Irish tale The Vision of Mac Conglinne. The workshop catered for students with varying levels of language competence and focused on creative use of the material. The conference was officially launched on the evening of the 5th June by a wine reception and public poetry evening held in the Lewis Glucksman Gallery. The poetry event comprised readings from ten local and internationally
renowned poets who have produced translations of medieval poetry, including several for The Word Exchange anthology. Leanne O’Sullivan, UCC’s writer in residence, compèred the event which was opened by Greg Delanty reading his translation of The Wanderer in full. The
evening was a rare opportunity to hear the poems performed by their translators, and
showcased the increasing accessibility and relevance of medieval poetry for a contemporary audience.
The conference itself served as a timely forum bringing together poets and academic translators to share their working practices and teaching methodologies, and this mixed audience led to lively discussions following each of the panels. The conference programme consisted of four plenary addresses and twenty-five papers given by established academics as well as early career scholars and graduate students. Over the course of the two days, around 100 people attended the conference, including a heartening number of undergraduate students. The keynote addresses were given by: Carolyne Larrington (University of Oxford), Heather O’Donoghue (University of Oxford), Chris Jones (University of St Andrews) and Hugh Magennis (Queen’s University Belfast). On the first day, the panels were dedicated to Old Norse and Old Irish translation; the final session also briefly ventured into Middle English verse and Provençal Troubadour poetry. The second day centered on the issues of translating Old English poetry and teaching through translation, and included papers on the translation of Old English into Spanish and Turkish, as well as featuring reports from ongoing translation initiatives, including the ‘Old English Poetry Project’ coordinated by Bob Hasenfratz and Miller Oberman.
The organizers plan to publish conference proceedings in the near future and more information about the aims and direction of ‘Eald to New’ can found at http://ealdtonew.org.
Tom Birkett and Kirsty March-Lyons
School of English, University College Cork