Manuscripts Changing Hands: Handschriften wechseln von Hand zu Hand
Medieval manuscripts were conceived to move from one set of hands to the next. Holding a book presented possibilities, and possessing a book implied power. Thus, books functioned as potent connectors. They bound producers with consumers, givers with recipients, writers with readers, writers with writers, and readers with readers. Books linked many generations and were intended to last. Hands attached messages in colophons, prayers, scribal notes, glosses, word plays, self-images, and other inserted materials. Hands also left traces in the form of penciled users' names, threats, curses, corrections, erasures, worn and torn pages, finger prints, and dirt. The contributors to this collection of essays analyze the ways in which the manuscript medium served and challenged communication. Sensorial empathies helped to construct communal identities that overcame barriers of time, class and calling. Diachronic communities formed around books in both men's and women's monasteries. Librarians, collectors, and makers of facsimiles strove to preserve these hand-made, handed down objects. Ten medievalists with specialties in history, musicology, art history, and the history of literature provide articles based on discussions that took place at an international workshop supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft at the Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbuttel in 2012. The volume reflects current issues relating to actor network theory and eco-critical concerns. It appears at the moment in which transient virtual media are replacing enduring material objects as means of communication.
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Manuscripts Changing Hands: Handschriften wechseln von Hand zu Hand
Medieval manuscripts were conceived to move from one set of hands to the next. Holding a book presented possibilities, and possessing a book implied power. Thus, books functioned as potent connectors. They bound producers with consumers, givers with recipients, writers with readers, writers with writers, and readers with readers. Books linked many generations and were intended to last. Hands attached messages in colophons, prayers, scribal notes, glosses, word plays, self-images, and other inserted materials. Hands also left traces in the form of penciled users' names, threats, curses, corrections, erasures, worn and torn pages, finger prints, and dirt. The contributors to this collection of essays analyze the ways in which the manuscript medium served and challenged communication. Sensorial empathies helped to construct communal identities that overcame barriers of time, class and calling. Diachronic communities formed around books in both men's and women's monasteries. Librarians, collectors, and makers of facsimiles strove to preserve these hand-made, handed down objects. Ten medievalists with specialties in history, musicology, art history, and the history of literature provide articles based on discussions that took place at an international workshop supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft at the Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbuttel in 2012. The volume reflects current issues relating to actor network theory and eco-critical concerns. It appears at the moment in which transient virtual media are replacing enduring material objects as means of communication.
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Manuscripts Changing Hands: Handschriften wechseln von Hand zu Hand

Manuscripts Changing Hands: Handschriften wechseln von Hand zu Hand

Manuscripts Changing Hands: Handschriften wechseln von Hand zu Hand

Manuscripts Changing Hands: Handschriften wechseln von Hand zu Hand

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Overview

Medieval manuscripts were conceived to move from one set of hands to the next. Holding a book presented possibilities, and possessing a book implied power. Thus, books functioned as potent connectors. They bound producers with consumers, givers with recipients, writers with readers, writers with writers, and readers with readers. Books linked many generations and were intended to last. Hands attached messages in colophons, prayers, scribal notes, glosses, word plays, self-images, and other inserted materials. Hands also left traces in the form of penciled users' names, threats, curses, corrections, erasures, worn and torn pages, finger prints, and dirt. The contributors to this collection of essays analyze the ways in which the manuscript medium served and challenged communication. Sensorial empathies helped to construct communal identities that overcame barriers of time, class and calling. Diachronic communities formed around books in both men's and women's monasteries. Librarians, collectors, and makers of facsimiles strove to preserve these hand-made, handed down objects. Ten medievalists with specialties in history, musicology, art history, and the history of literature provide articles based on discussions that took place at an international workshop supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft at the Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbuttel in 2012. The volume reflects current issues relating to actor network theory and eco-critical concerns. It appears at the moment in which transient virtual media are replacing enduring material objects as means of communication.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783447103916
Publisher: Harrassowitz Verlag
Publication date: 09/15/2016
Series: Wolfenbutteler Mittelalter-Studien , #31
Edition description: 1., Aufl.
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 6.60(w) x 9.60(h) x 1.10(d)

Table of Contents

Vorwort Volker Schier Corine Schleif 7

Haptic Communities: Hands joined in and on Manuscripts Corine Schleif 9

Textual Communities: Die frühmittelalterliche Regula solitariorum und die Waldbrüder und -schwestern im spätmittelalterlichen St. Gallen Gabrjela Signori 79

Altering the Painted Page: Reception and Change in Some French Liturgical and Civic Manuscripts, Thirteenth-Fourteenth Centuries Alison Stones 101

Too Many Cooks?: The Multiple Hands in a German Convent Homilary (Oxford, Bodleian Library, Ms. Douce 185) Judith Oliver 131

From Hand to Hand: Transfers of Liturgical Books in the Diocese of Cambrai in the Late Middle Ages Barbara Haggu-Huglo 165

An Editor Inserts Himself: The Case of Johannes in Wolfenbüttel, Herzog August Bibliothek, Cod. Guelf. 38 Helmst Volker Schier 181

Bücher in den Händen von Klosterbibliothekaren. Befunde aus dem 15. und frühen 16. Jahrhundert am Beispiel der Kartause und des Benediktinerklosters in Erfurt Matthias Eifler 207

Where's Muri?: The Progress of a Manuscript Collection with a Destiny of Dissolution Nancy Van Deusen 255

An Early Eighteenth-century Attempt to Publish a Facsimile of Two Sachsenspiegel Manuscripts Madeline H. Caviness Hiram Kümper 283

Biographic information on the authors 333

Color plates/ Farbabbildungen 337

Index 353

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