Collecting, organizing and transmitting knowledge : miscellanies in Late Medieval Europe /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Turnhout : Brepols, 2018.
Description:262 pages : illustrations ; 28 cm.
Language:English
Series:Bibliologia ; volume 49
Bibliologia (Turnhout, Belgium) ; v. 49.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11703150
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Corbellini, Sabrina, 1969- editor.
Murano, Giovanna, editor.
Signore, Giacomo, 1984- editor.
ISBN:9782503569703
2503569706
Notes:"The papers contained in this volume were originally delivered at the international workshop Late medieval manuscript miscellanies organized at and funded by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Science (1 to 3 October 2014)"--Page [7].
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Summary:Miscellanies may easily make up the single largest group of medieval manuscripts. It was especially in the Late Middle Ages that the number of such multi-textual manuscripts, often compiled by lay and religious individuals for personal or communal use, grew substantially. In spite of their seminal relevance for the reconstruction of medieval culture, such manuscripts have not until recently garnered much scholarly interest. The present volume pinpoints the societal and cultural relevance of 14th- and 15th-century miscellanies as well as their role in the understanding of textual creation, transformation and complexity, in both late medieval and early modern societies. The contributions scrutinise, on the one side, text corpora and textual traditions that had a seminal impact on late medieval European culture: the texts of Geoffrey Chaucer and Reginald Pecock, the manuscripts of Dante's 'Commedia', late medieval Italian and Latin poetic anthologies, but also miscellanies from the Council of Basel and multi-textual manuscripts containing anti-Hussite texts. On the other side, the volume takes into account individual scribes/compilers and collections: from remarkable cases such as Pico della Mirandola and Leonardo da Vinci, to personal collections made up by lesser-known but not less significant compilers and users. Under a strong pan-European umbrella, the volume embarks on specific problems, among which authorship, non-autonomy, composition, reception and use, along with more general issues such as multilingualism or the relationship between image and text.

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Call Number: Z106.5.E85 C65 2018
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