Private : : do (not) enter : personal writings and textual scholarship / / edited by João Dionísio.

Until recently, writings of a private nature have been neglected in literary and textual studies. There are two main reasons for this: the scarcity of pre-modern witnesses of this type of textual production and, in contrast, the over-abundance of material in contemporary writers’ archives. Although...

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Superior document:Variants : the journal of the European Society for Textual Scholarship, 8
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Amsterdam ;, New York : : Rodopi B.V.,, 2012.
Year of Publication:2012
Language:English
Series:Variants 8.
Physical Description:1 online resource (229 p.)
Notes:Revised and updated papers originally delivered at the Fifth International Conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship, University of Lisbon, 2008.
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Description
Other title:Preliminary Material --
Introduction --
Letters as Mediators between Private and Public Space /
From the Private to the Public: Some Remarks on Bordalo Pinheiro’s Correspondence in Text and Images /
Licensed to Sneak: Why We Should (Be Able to) Read Writers’ Secret Diaries and Letters, and Why Sometimes We Are Not /
Written in Prison /
Lithuanian Handwritten Books in the Period of the Ban on the Lithuanian Press (1864–1904) /
Particularly Public and Very Private /
It is True that They Wrote It /
“Reconstructing Silences”: On the Study and Editing of Private Letters by Spanish Children Evacuated to Russia during the Spanish Civil War /
Pessoa’s Notebooks: Windows to Crowded Streets /
From Print to Script /
Hæc Subtilis Ars Inveniendi: Considerations of João Penha’s Literary Archive /
The Genetic “I” in Émile Zola /
Angelo Colocci’s Crosses and a Text of Airas Carpancho /
The Secret Life of Ballad Manuscripts /
Daniel Hobbins. Authorship and Publicity Before Print: Jean Gerson and the Transformation of Late Medieval Learning. /
Ann Hollinshead Hurley and Chanita Goodblatt, editions. Women Editing/Editing Women: Early Modern Women Writers and the New Textualism. /
Stephen Hebron. John Keats: A Poet and His Manuscripts. /
Marilyn Deegan and Kathryn Sutherland. Transferred Illusions: Digital Technology and the Forms of Print. /
Richard Ovenden, Richard Kuhta and Neil Fraistat, editions. Shakespeare Quarto Archive. /
John van Wyhe, edition The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online. /
Vincent van Gogh: The Letters. Eds. Leo Jansen, Hans Luyten and Nienke Bakker. /
Contributors /
Textual Cultures /
Summary:Until recently, writings of a private nature have been neglected in literary and textual studies. There are two main reasons for this: the scarcity of pre-modern witnesses of this type of textual production and, in contrast, the over-abundance of material in contemporary writers’ archives. Although in more recent times there has been a marked shift towards the study of private and personal writings, important issues remain to be studied. In the light of genetic criticism and in the context of the broadening attention of textual scholarship to all matters relating to textual production, these texts have acquired a new status, but the legal, philological and historical questions they raise have not been systematically addressed. The new interest of textual scholarship in the processes of creation and dissemination of texts offers an opportunity to reflect more thoroughly on the nature of these documents: on the role they play as witnesses to specific literary or para-literary genres (e.g. letters, diaries), on their significance in circumstances of political repression, and as part of the textual genetic process. This collection of essays includes articles that deal, through heterogeneous approaches, with different aspects of Dutch, English, French, Lithuanian, Portuguese and Spanish written cultures.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:128039479X
9786613572714
9401207542
ISSN:1573-3084 ;
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by João Dionísio.