Textual Situations: Three
Medieval Manuscripts and Their Readers.
By Andrew Taylor. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002.
Pp. vi + 300; 31 illustrations. $55.
Andrew Taylor's book is far brighter in conception than execution. An
idea of great promise, one meriting the most serious consideration, underlies
his project. Taylor brings to manuscript study Donald McKenzie's "history
of the book," a narrative conscious of the literary work, not as transcendent
object, but one always mediated by its context. Taylor argues forcefully
and plausibly that, in manuscript culture, such a context must always
be double; the text will be conditioned by two broadly physical contexts
or "situations "æits placement both within a specific book, typically
in the Middle Ages miscellaneous, and within a specific library or circle
of reader- and ownership.
Ralph Hanna
Keble College, Oxford |
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