Difference between revisions of "Jackson 2001"
From Commonplace Book
(Created page with "Heather Jackson. Marginalia: Readers Writing in Books. Yale UP, 2001. Web. ==Intro== *2 How do we explain the discrepancy between worthless notes and priceless ones? ** "easy...") |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 16:39, 25 February 2018
Heather Jackson. Marginalia: Readers Writing in Books. Yale UP, 2001. Web.
Intro
- 2 How do we explain the discrepancy between worthless notes and priceless ones?
- "easy to dismiss the products of our own age"
- "Western consumer societies are inclined to despise used goods"
- Readers' notes in books are a familiar but unexamined phenomenon.
- 5 Though the annotator herself can hardly have been aware of the fact, her practice in annotation is consistent with centuries of tradition reaching back far beyond the birth of print.
- she also mentions the digital products with annotation features -- here the digital catching up with the print or manuscript (see Stallybrass 2002)
- 6 Given the recent shift of attention from the writer to the reader and to the production, dissemination, and reception of texts, marginalia of all periods would appear to be potentially a goldmine for scholars...Critics disagree, however, about the reliability of readers' notes, and consequently about the ways in which they might legitimately be used to reconstruct either a reading environment or the mental experience of a particular reader.
- and there just aren't enough annotated books for it to be the sole basis of a history of reading -- see Knight 2015, Knight 2013
- methodological caution: ...the sample set of works [~2000] has no claim to being exhaustive or representative or even statistically significant. It is large and diverse enough, nevertheless, to expose basic patterns in readers' practice.
- 13 It does not aim to be comprehensive, only to set out the history and conventions of a wide-spread custom by reference to a substantial body of specific cases.
- Sherman 2008 similarly situates his findings
- 7 Coleridge as occupying a "pivotal position in the history of marginalia in English" (he brought the word into English in 1819) - prolific annotator
- his annotated books published (i.e. the notes) by the Victorians and collected at the BL
- 9 cataloguing collecting practices shaping scholarly horizons: "Catalogues therefore normally record the presence of marginalia only when they are authorial or associated with a famous name"
- 17 high degree of continuity of practices [over period 1700-2000]