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Literary Criticism Medieval

Textual Situations

Three Medieval Manuscripts and Their Readers

by (author) Andrew Taylor

Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Initial publish date
Feb 2002
Category
Medieval
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780812236422
    Publish Date
    Feb 2002
    List Price
    $75.00 USD

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Description

Generations of scholars have meditated upon the literary devices and cultural meanings of The Song of Roland. But according to Andrew Taylor not enough attention has been given to the physical context of the manuscript itself. The original copy of The Song of Roland is actually bound with a Latin translation of the Timaeus.
Textual Situations looks at this bound volume along with two other similarly bound medieval volumes to explore the manuscripts and marginalia that have been cast into shadow by the fame of adjacent texts, some of the most read medieval works. In addition to the bound volume that contains The Song of Roland, Taylor examines the volume that binds the well-known poem "Sumer is icumen in" with the Lais of Marie de France, and a volume containing the legal Decretals of Gregory IX with marginal illustrations of wayfaring life decorating its borders.
Approaching the manuscript as artifact, Textual Situations suggests that medieval texts must be examined in terms of their material support—that is, literal interpretation must take into consideration the physical manuscript itself in addition to the social conventions that surround its compilation. Taylor reconstructs the circumstances of the creation of these medieval bound volumes, the settings in which they were read, inscribed, and shared, and the social and intellectual conventions surrounding them.

About the author

Andrew Taylor (1907–1993) was one of Canada’s foremost polar explorers. An immigrant to Canada from Edinburgh, Taylor earned his engineering degree from the University of Manitoba in 1931. Before joining the Canadian Army, he was Town Engineer in Flin Flon.

Andrew Taylor's profile page

Editorial Reviews

This is s study that is full of ideas, learned, lucid, and incisive; and it is all the more attractive for what can be found in the margins of its arguments, for Taylor manages to bring a remarkably wide range of contexts to bear. . . . It is the breadth of interest and information that makes Textual Situations as entertaining as it is provocative.

<i>MLR</i>

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