Tribble 1993: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with ':Tribble, Evelyn B. ''Margins and Marginality: The Printed Page in Early Modern England.'' Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 2003. == Introduction: Whose Text? == …') |
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medieval period -- authority / auctor "always an other, located outside the writer and conferring authority from a historical distance" (2) | medieval period -- authority / auctor "always an other, located outside the writer and conferring authority from a historical distance" (2) | ||
:"The margins are not consistently a sit of subversion, consolidation, or containment, to invoke the rather limited possibilities offered by current historically oriented Renaissance debates. Rather, i argue that the margins and the text proper were in shifting relationships of authority; the margin might affirm, summarize, underwrite the main text block and thus tend to stabilize meaning, but it might equally assume a contestatory or parodic relation to the text by which it stood." (6) | |||
'''Bible''' | |||
* "tension between the desire to provide texts of the Bible and the fears engendered by the specter of its uncontrolled circulation" (7) | |||
* "The history of the English printed Bible cannot be told apart from its margins" (7) | |||
* marginal notes -- tried to both quiet and excite controversy | |||
== Authority, Control, Community: The English Printed Bible Page from Tyndale to the Authorized Version == | |||
Melanchton "declares a new mode of reading: 'Now away with so many frigid petty glosses, '''these harmonizings and "disharmonies" and other hindrances to intelligence''''" |
Revision as of 20:38, 4 September 2011
- Tribble, Evelyn B. Margins and Marginality: The Printed Page in Early Modern England. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 2003.
Introduction: Whose Text?
- "I am concerned with books, the text embodied. More than embodied: dressed, bedecked, adorned -- with prefatory matter, illustrations, and most importantly, marginal notes."
- "Modern editions which omit such accompanying matter in effect rewrite the text by effacing evidence of its collaborative nature, of the conversation between a text and its margins, of the play made possible by the space of the page." (1)
medieval period -- authority / auctor "always an other, located outside the writer and conferring authority from a historical distance" (2)
- "The margins are not consistently a sit of subversion, consolidation, or containment, to invoke the rather limited possibilities offered by current historically oriented Renaissance debates. Rather, i argue that the margins and the text proper were in shifting relationships of authority; the margin might affirm, summarize, underwrite the main text block and thus tend to stabilize meaning, but it might equally assume a contestatory or parodic relation to the text by which it stood." (6)
Bible
- "tension between the desire to provide texts of the Bible and the fears engendered by the specter of its uncontrolled circulation" (7)
- "The history of the English printed Bible cannot be told apart from its margins" (7)
- marginal notes -- tried to both quiet and excite controversy
Authority, Control, Community: The English Printed Bible Page from Tyndale to the Authorized Version
Melanchton "declares a new mode of reading: 'Now away with so many frigid petty glosses, these harmonizings and "disharmonies" and other hindrances to intelligence'"