Murdoch retired from Stirling as Emeritus Professor in 2007, but is still involved with the school. He continues to write and research. Murdoch is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and a member of the editorial board of the Medieval and Renaissance Authors and Texts series, published by Brill.[3]
Murdoch is particularly interested in religious texts.[1] His earliest work is concerned with the Altdeutsche Genesis and other German Adam Books, later exploring the same theme in other vernaculars. In several hundred published works he established the centrality of the "popular" (as opposed to the exegetical) understanding of the "protoplasts" in far wider areas of medieval thought than had hitherto been appreciated. He demonstrated that an awareness of Adam motifs allows an entirely new reading of some of the classics of medieval literature, most notably Hartmann'sGregorius. The broader impact of these studies has been to raise awareness of vernacular Bible traditions in many aspects of Medieval Studies.[citation needed]
On 25 March 1967, Murdoch married Ursula Irene Riffer, a teacher, with whom he has a son and a daughter.[1]
Select bibliography
The Fall of Man in the Early Middle High German Biblical Epic, Kuemmerle, 1972.
The Recapitulated Fall: A Comparative Study in Medieval Literature, Rodopi, 1974.
(Editor with David Wells and Roy Wisbey, and Contributor) Concordances to the Early Middle High German Biblical Epic, Cambridge University Press, 1976.