MDT Ep. 89: Interview with a Devil

Published: Dec. 22, 2021, 2:09 a.m.

b'In this (belated) episode marking our seventh anniversary, we learn about the infernal realms, straight from the devil\'s mouth, going from a 11th-century Old English text to the 16th-century stage. We also learn why you shouldn\'t attack your father with an ax and what demonic possession has in common with e. Coli.\\n\\nToday\'s Texts:\\nKemble, John M., editor and translator. The Dialogue of Salomon and Saturnus, with an Historical Introduction. The \\xc6lfric Society, 1848, pp. 86-88. Google Books.\\nFaust Book. In Early English Prose Romances, edited by William John Thoms. Nattali and Bond, 1858. Digital text available at the Perseus Project.\\nMarlowe, Christopher. The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus from the Quarto of 1604. Edited by Alexander Dyce. Project Gutenberg, 2009.\\nde Vitry, Jacques. Exempla of Jacques de Vitry. Edited by Thomas Frederick Crane, David Nutt, 1890. Google Books.\\nGregory the Great. The Dialogues of Saint Gregory, Surnamed the Great: Pope of Rome & the First of That Name. Translated by P.W., edited by Edmund G. Gardner, Philip Lee Warner, 1911. Digital text edited by Roger Pearce, 2004, https://www.tertullian.org/fathers/gregory_00_dialogues_intro.htm. \\n\\n\\nReferences\\nAndrew, Malcom. \\u201cGrendel in Hell.\\u201d English Studies, vol. 62, no. 5, 1981, pp. 401\\u2013410.\\nRobinson, Fred C. "The Devil\'s Account of the Next World: An Anecdote from Old English Homiletic Literature." Neuphilologische Mitteilungen, vol. 73, no., 1/3, 1972, pp. 363-371. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/43345366.'