Assessment Task 2: Critical Essay – Heroism in Beowulf
Unit Context
In this first-year English literature unit students examine the foundational texts of the Anglo-Saxon period. Beowulf stands as the central work, an epic that blends pagan heroic ideals with emerging Christian values. The poem invites analysis of leadership, mortality and the limits of human power. This task requires direct engagement with the primary text to evaluate the protagonist against classic and contemporary models of heroism.
Task Description
Write a 1,200–1,500-word essay that examines how Beowulf demonstrates three core heroic qualities: altruism, proven strength and dangerous confidence. Argue whether these traits elevate him to the status of an enduring hero or contribute to his eventual downfall. Support every claim with specific line references from the poem and maintain a clear, consistent thesis throughout.
Requirements
- MLA 9th edition formatting, including a Works Cited page
- At least five direct quotations from Beowulf with line numbers
- One optional secondary source for contextual support only
- Standard academic English; no first-person pronouns except in the conclusion if reflecting on modern parallels
- Submit as a Word document through the unit portal by the due date specified in the unit outline
Marking Rubric
- Thesis and Argument (30%) – Clear, debatable thesis; logical progression; addresses all three qualities and their interplay.
- Evidence and Textual Analysis (35%) – Precise line references; close reading that explains how quoted material supports the claim.
- Structure and Coherence (20%) – Effective introduction, topic sentences, smooth transitions and strong conclusion.
- Academic Conventions (15%) – Correct MLA citation, grammar, spelling and adherence to word limit (±10%).
Sample Response Writing Help
Beowulf arrives in Heorot ready to risk his life for people he barely knows. He tells Hrothgar that fate will decide the outcome and proceeds without hesitation. The text records his promise that he will meet Grendel unarmed because the monster fights the same way. This decision shows both altruism and absolute confidence in his own power. When the battle turns, Beowulf rips off Grendel’s arm with his bare hands, proving the reputation that precedes him. Yet the same confidence later leads him to face the dragon alone even when age has weakened his body. One recent study confirms that the poet repeatedly links Beowulf’s physical strength to divine approval, positioning the hero as an instrument of higher order (Leneghan, 2024). In the end these three qualities remain inseparable: the altruism that saves nations, the strength that defeats monsters and the confidence that refuses retreat together define Beowulf and seal his fate.
Recent scholarship in English Studies continues to trace how the poem balances celebration of heroic action with quiet warnings about its cost. Journals such as English Studies and peer-reviewed repositories document over four hundred articles published since 2018 that revisit the tension between individual glory and communal survival in Beowulf. University curricula in the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia routinely assign this text precisely because the same qualities that produce victory also expose the fragility of heroic culture when tested against time and mortality.
- Submit a 1,200–1,500-word essay that analyses altruism, proven strength and dangerous confidence in Beowulf using MLA format and direct line references from the poem.
- Complete a 4-to-6-page critical essay exploring what makes Beowulf a hero and whether his confidence ultimately causes his downfall.
- Write an analytical essay on the three essential qualities that define Beowulf’s heroism and examine their consequences in the Anglo-Saxon epic.
References (APA 7th edition)
Leneghan, F. (2024). Beowulf, the wrath of God and the fall of the angels. English Studies. https://doi.org/10.1080/0013838X.2024.2333641
Price, B. A. (2024). Sufficient tragedy: Masculinity as cruel optimism in Beowulf. English Studies. https://doi.org/10.1080/0013838X.2024.2393068
Anonymous. (2025). Beowulf and the failure of legacy: The poem as a critique of heroic culture. Zenodo. https://zenodo.org/records/16900071
Kumar, R. (2023). Beowulf as an epic tale of heroism, valor, and legacy. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8243116