ABSTRACT

Marginalia in early modern and medieval texts – printed, handwrit- ten, drawn, scratched, colored, and pasted in – offer a glimpse of how people, as individuals and in groups, interacted with books and manu- scripts over often lengthy periods of time. The chapters in this volume build on earlier scholarship that established marginalia as an intellec- tual method (Grafton and Jardine), as records of reading motivated by cultural, social, theological, and personal inclinations (Brayman [Hackel] and Orgel), and as practices inspired by material affordances particular to the book and the pen (Fleming and Sherman). They further the study of the practices of marginalia as a mode – a set of ways in which material opportunities and practices overlap with intellectual, social, and personal motivations to make meaning in the world. They introduce us to a set of idiosyncratic examples such as the trace marks of objects left in books, deliberately or by accident; cut-and-pasted additions to printed volumes; a marriage depicted through shared book ownership. They reveal to us in case studies the unique value of mar- ginalia as evidence of phenomena as important and diverse as religious change, authorial self-invention, and the history of the literary canon. The chapters of this book go beyond the case study, however, and raise broad historical, cultural, and theoretical questions about the strange, marvelous, metamorphic thing we call the book, and the equally mul- tiplicitous, eccentric, and inscrutable beings who accompany them through history: readers and writers.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Marginalia, Reading, and Writing

section Section 1|1 pages

Materialities

chapter 2|16 pages

Cut-and-Paste Bookmaking

The Private/Public Agency of Robert Nicolson

chapter 3|19 pages

Book Marks

Object Traces in Early Modern Books

chapter 4|21 pages

The Occupation of the Margins

Writing, Space, and Early Modern Women

section Section 2|1 pages

Selves

chapter 5|22 pages

Praying in the Margins across the Reformation

Readers’ Marks in Early Tudor Books of Hours

chapter 6|19 pages

Articles of Assent

Clergymen’s Subscribed Copies of the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England

chapter 8|18 pages

Marital Marginalia

The Seventeenth-Century Library of Thomas and Isabella Hervey

section Section 3|1 pages

Modes

chapter 10|39 pages

Vide Supplementum

Early Modern Collation as Play-Reading in the First Folio