Rhetoric about books usually emphasizes their semantic contents. Larger-than-average and smaller-than-average books, however, draw our attention to their material form. Size therefore provides one means for ritualizing the iconic dimension of books. While enlarging books quickly exceeds any practical purpose for the sake of public display, shrinking books tends to carry with it pragmatic rhetoric about portability, low expense, and mass production. Yet the popularity of textual amulets across history and cultures suggests that private ritualization drives much of the market for miniatures
For centuries books have contained and presented the written words that have allowed humankind to st...
This article investigates how the seminal focus placed on portability as the defining characteristic...
Major: Art History and Creative Writing Faculty Mentor: Dr. Elizabeth Welch, Art and Art History Sar...
Religious traditions typically ritualize their scriptures in three dimensions. Other kinds of texts ...
The variety of subjects that appear betwene thse tiny covers is as diverse as that found in full-siz...
The preface to a mid-seventeenth century edition of Verbum Sempiternum declares that ‘though ...
There is a long tradition of miniature books, from tiny medieval illuminated manuscripts, to the Vic...
The history of miniature books is long and varied; their popularity has fluctuated since their origi...
This catalogue highlights 35 miniature books held in the Queen Elizabeth II Library’s Special Collec...
Touching and holding books does not usually evoke the language of sensation. Touching a book indexes...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
According to a longstanding interpretation, book religions are agents of textuality and logocentrism...
The University of St. Andrews Library Open Access Fund supported this Open Access publication. The L...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
There is a complex relationship between the authority of (printed) texts and their contents. While t...
For centuries books have contained and presented the written words that have allowed humankind to st...
This article investigates how the seminal focus placed on portability as the defining characteristic...
Major: Art History and Creative Writing Faculty Mentor: Dr. Elizabeth Welch, Art and Art History Sar...
Religious traditions typically ritualize their scriptures in three dimensions. Other kinds of texts ...
The variety of subjects that appear betwene thse tiny covers is as diverse as that found in full-siz...
The preface to a mid-seventeenth century edition of Verbum Sempiternum declares that ‘though ...
There is a long tradition of miniature books, from tiny medieval illuminated manuscripts, to the Vic...
The history of miniature books is long and varied; their popularity has fluctuated since their origi...
This catalogue highlights 35 miniature books held in the Queen Elizabeth II Library’s Special Collec...
Touching and holding books does not usually evoke the language of sensation. Touching a book indexes...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
According to a longstanding interpretation, book religions are agents of textuality and logocentrism...
The University of St. Andrews Library Open Access Fund supported this Open Access publication. The L...
Medieval manuscripts resisted obsolescence. Made by highly specialised craftspeople (scribes, illumi...
There is a complex relationship between the authority of (printed) texts and their contents. While t...
For centuries books have contained and presented the written words that have allowed humankind to st...
This article investigates how the seminal focus placed on portability as the defining characteristic...
Major: Art History and Creative Writing Faculty Mentor: Dr. Elizabeth Welch, Art and Art History Sar...