Material Texts in Early Modern England
Title | Material Texts in Early Modern England PDF eBook |
Author | Adam Smyth |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 223 |
Release | 2018-01-11 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 1108421326 |
This book combines book history and literary criticism to explore how early modern books were richer things than previously imagined.
Books and Readers in Early Modern England
Title | Books and Readers in Early Modern England PDF eBook |
Author | Jennifer Andersen |
Publisher | University of Pennsylvania Press |
Pages | 312 |
Release | 2012-07-28 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0812204719 |
Books and Readers in Early Modern England examines readers, reading, and publication practices from the Renaissance to the Restoration. The essays draw on an array of documentary evidence—from library catalogs, prefaces, title pages and dedications, marginalia, commonplace books, and letters to ink, paper, and bindings—to explore individual reading habits and experiences in a period of religious dissent, political instability, and cultural transformation. Chapters in the volume cover oral, scribal, and print cultures, examining the emergence of the "public spheres" of reading practices. Contributors, who include Christopher Grose, Ann Hughes, David Scott Kastan, Kathleen Lynch, William Sherman, and Peter Stallybrass, investigate interactions among publishers, texts, authors, and audience. They discuss the continuity of the written word and habits of mind in the world of print, the formation and differentiation of readerships, and the increasing influence of public opinion. The work demonstrates that early modern publications appeared in a wide variety of forms—from periodical literature to polemical pamphlets—and reflected the radical transformations occurring at the time in the dissemination of knowledge through the written word. These forms were far more ephemeral, and far more widely available, than modern stereotypes of writing from this period suggest.
Boxes and Books in Early Modern England
Title | Boxes and Books in Early Modern England PDF eBook |
Author | Lucy Razzall |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 267 |
Release | 2021-08-19 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1108831338 |
Uses the idea of the box in early modern England to develop a new direction in book history and material culture.
Material Texts in Early Modern England
Title | Material Texts in Early Modern England PDF eBook |
Author | Adam Smyth |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 224 |
Release | 2018-01-11 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1108373208 |
What was a book in early modern England? By combining book history, bibliography and literary criticism, Material Texts in Early Modern England explores how sixteenth- and seventeenth-century books were stranger, richer things than scholars have imagined. Adam Smyth examines important aspects of bibliographical culture which have been under-examined by critics: the cutting up of books as a form of careful reading; book destruction and its relation to canon formation; the prevalence of printed errors and the literary richness of mistakes; and the recycling of older texts in the bodies of new books, as printed waste. How did authors, including Herbert, Jonson, Milton, Nashe and Cavendish, respond to this sense of the book as patched, transient, flawed, and palimpsestic? Material Texts in Early Modern England recovers these traits and practices, and so crucially revises our sense of what a book was, and what a book might be.
Voice in Motion
Title | Voice in Motion PDF eBook |
Author | Gina Bloom |
Publisher | University of Pennsylvania Press |
Pages | 286 |
Release | 2013-04-19 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0812201310 |
Voice in Motion explores the human voice as a literary, historical, and performative motif in early modern English drama and culture, where the voice was frequently represented as struggling, even failing, to work. In a compelling and original argument, Gina Bloom demonstrates that early modern ideas about the efficacy of spoken communication spring from an understanding of the voice's materiality. Voices can be cracked by the bodies that produce them, scattered by winds when transmitted as breath through their acoustic environment, stopped by clogged ears meant to receive them, and displaced by echoic resonances. The early modern theater underscored the voice's volatility through the use of pubescent boy actors, whose vocal organs were especially vulnerable to malfunction. Reading plays by Shakespeare, Marston, and their contemporaries alongside a wide range of late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century texts—including anatomy books, acoustic science treatises, Protestant sermons, music manuals, and even translations of Ovid—Bloom maintains that cultural representations and theatrical enactments of the voice as "unruly matter" undermined early modern hierarchies of gender. The uncontrollable physical voice creates anxiety for men, whose masculinity is contingent on their capacity to discipline their voices and the voices of their subordinates. By contrast, for women the voice is most effective not when it is owned and mastered but when it is relinquished to the environment beyond. There, the voice's fragile material form assumes its full destabilizing potential and becomes a surprising source of female power. Indeed, Bloom goes further to query the boundary between the production and reception of vocal sound, suggesting provocatively that it is through active listening, not just speaking, that women on and off the stage reshape their world. Bringing together performance theory, theater history, theories of embodiment, and sound studies, this book makes a significant contribution to gender studies and feminist theory by challenging traditional conceptions of the links among voice, body, and self.
'Grossly Material Things'
Title | 'Grossly Material Things' PDF eBook |
Author | Helen Smith |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 271 |
Release | 2012-05-03 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 0199651582 |
Virginia Woolf described fictions as 'grossly material things', rooted in their physical and economic contexts. This book takes Woolf's hint as its starting point, asking who made the books of the English Renaissance. It recovering the ways in which women participated as co-authors, editors, translators, patrons, printers, booksellers, and readers.
Curiosities and Texts
Title | Curiosities and Texts PDF eBook |
Author | Marjorie Swann |
Publisher | University of Pennsylvania Press |
Pages | 289 |
Release | 2010-11-24 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0812203178 |
A craze for collecting swept England during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Aristocrats and middling-sort men alike crammed their homes full of a bewildering variety of physical objects: antique coins, scientific instruments, minerals, mummified corpses, zoological specimens, plants, ethnographic objects from Asia and the Americas, statues, portraits. Why were these bizarre jumbles of artifacts so popular? In Curiosities and Texts, Marjorie Swann demonstrates that collections of physical objects were central to early modern English literature and culture. Swann examines the famous collection of rarities assembled by the Tradescant family; the development of English natural history; narrative catalogs of English landscape features that began to appear in the Tudor and Stuart periods; the writings of Ben Jonson and Robert Herrick; and the foundation of the British Museum. Through this wide-ranging series of case studies, Swann addresses two important questions: How was the collection, which was understood as a form of cultural capital, appropriated in early modern England to construct new social selves and modes of subjectivity? And how did literary texts—both as material objects and as vehicles of representation—participate in the process of negotiating the cultural significance of collectors and collecting? Crafting her unique argument with a balance of detail and insight, Swann sheds new light on material culture's relationship to literature, social authority, and personal identity.