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Sherman, William H. '''Used Books: Marking Readers in Renaissance England.''' Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008.
avoiding words "marginalia" and "reading": "These terms tend to bring with them a set of modern cultural assumptions and disciplinary tools that do not fit well with the evidence that survives from the pre-modern archive." (xiii)
avoiding words "marginalia" and "reading": "These terms tend to bring with them a set of modern cultural assumptions and disciplinary tools that do not fit well with the evidence that survives from the pre-modern archive." (xiii)


instead, "book use", pulling from Bradin Cormack and Carla Mazzio (xiii), themselves drawing on Geoffrey Whitney (''Usus libri, non lectio prudentes facit'')
instead, '''"book use"''', pulling from Bradin Cormack and Carla Mazzio (xiii), themselves drawing on Geoffrey Whitney (''Usus libri, non lectio prudentes facit'')


:"I am endorsing Stoddard's suggestion that '''textual scholars must also be anthropologists and archaeologists''', putting books alongside the other objects taht can help us to reconstruct the material, mental, and cultural worlds of our forebears" (xiv)
:"I am endorsing Stoddard's suggestion that '''textual scholars must also be anthropologists and archaeologists''', putting books alongside the other objects taht can help us to reconstruct the material, mental, and cultural worlds of our forebears" (xiv)

Revision as of 21:09, 3 October 2010

Sherman, William H. Used Books: Marking Readers in Renaissance England. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008.


avoiding words "marginalia" and "reading": "These terms tend to bring with them a set of modern cultural assumptions and disciplinary tools that do not fit well with the evidence that survives from the pre-modern archive." (xiii)

instead, "book use", pulling from Bradin Cormack and Carla Mazzio (xiii), themselves drawing on Geoffrey Whitney (Usus libri, non lectio prudentes facit)

"I am endorsing Stoddard's suggestion that textual scholars must also be anthropologists and archaeologists, putting books alongside the other objects taht can help us to reconstruct the material, mental, and cultural worlds of our forebears" (xiv)

Simon Goldhill, "Literary History without Literature"; "perhaps it is time to call for a history of reading without reading?" (xv)

  • c.f. statistical analysis of texts, "distant reading"...

Introduction: Used Books