Early modern books were not stable or settled outputs of the press but dynamic shapechangers, subject to reworking, representation, revision, and reinterpretation. Their history is often the history of multiple, sometimes competing, agencies as their texts were repackaged, redirected, and transformed in ways that their original authors might hardly recognize. Processes of editing, revision, redaction, selection, abridgement, glossing, disputation, translation, and posthumous publication resulted in a textual elasticity and mobility that could dissolve distinctions between text and paratexts, textuality and intertextuality, manuscript and print, author and reader or editor, such that title and authors name are no longer sufficient pointers to a books identity or contents. This collection brings together original essays by an international team of eminent scholars in the field of book history that explore these various kinds of textual inconstancy and variability. The essays are alive to the impact of commercial and technological aspects of book production and distribution (discussing, for example, the career of the preeminent bookseller John Nourse, the market appeal of abridgements, and the financial incentives to posthumous publication), but their interest is also in the many additional forms of agency that shaped texts and their meanings as books were repurposed to articulate, and respond to, a variety of cultural and individual needs. They engage with early modern...
Binding: Hardcover;278 pages; Publisher: Oxford University Press; Classification: AKH; Weight: 680 g; Dimensions: 240 x 160 x 21
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