This article considers the cultural practice of cutting up texts in early modern England. The article provides a taxonomy of evidence for this practice, in part based on the Anglican community of Little Gidding in the 1630s, where members of the group bought printed gospels and cut them up to reorder, and harmonise, the story of Christ's life. The article then considers the implications of this practice of cutting, including for how we think about authorship
International audienceWith its many rites of initiation (religious, educational, professional or sex...
This article explores the editing of early-modern sermons, with a particular focus on the challenge ...
In recent years, the materials used in textual production have been understood to be essential to a ...
<p>At the community of Little Gidding from the late 1620s through the 1640s, in a special room known...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham's Libra...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham’s Libra...
The first rule of writing is an important one: writers should not plagiarize; what they write should...
This article examines the social role of literacy in a period of rapid commercial development and gr...
This article investigates an erasure technique present in the seventeenth century English manuscript...
This essay explores some of the recent history of how early modern women’s writing was edited. The p...
Printing in the Anglo-Saxon type began in the mid-sixteenth century in a burst of activity that was ...
This study examines how manuscript and print culture functioned as a site of memory and commemoratio...
My doctoral dissertation investigates the ideological operations that shape readers\u27 understandin...
This project explores how Protestant theology shaped early modern authors who made the surprising an...
Though the study of copying, imitation, forgery, and reproduction have a long lineage in the history...
International audienceWith its many rites of initiation (religious, educational, professional or sex...
This article explores the editing of early-modern sermons, with a particular focus on the challenge ...
In recent years, the materials used in textual production have been understood to be essential to a ...
<p>At the community of Little Gidding from the late 1620s through the 1640s, in a special room known...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham's Libra...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham’s Libra...
The first rule of writing is an important one: writers should not plagiarize; what they write should...
This article examines the social role of literacy in a period of rapid commercial development and gr...
This article investigates an erasure technique present in the seventeenth century English manuscript...
This essay explores some of the recent history of how early modern women’s writing was edited. The p...
Printing in the Anglo-Saxon type began in the mid-sixteenth century in a burst of activity that was ...
This study examines how manuscript and print culture functioned as a site of memory and commemoratio...
My doctoral dissertation investigates the ideological operations that shape readers\u27 understandin...
This project explores how Protestant theology shaped early modern authors who made the surprising an...
Though the study of copying, imitation, forgery, and reproduction have a long lineage in the history...
International audienceWith its many rites of initiation (religious, educational, professional or sex...
This article explores the editing of early-modern sermons, with a particular focus on the challenge ...
In recent years, the materials used in textual production have been understood to be essential to a ...