ABSTRACT

The typographic imaginary is an aesthetic linking authors from William Caxton to Alexander Pope, this study centrally contends. Early modern English literature engages imaginatively with printing and this book both characterizes that engagement and proposes the typographic imaginary as a framework for its analysis. Certain texts, Rachel Stenner states, describe the people, places, concerns, and processes of printing in ways that, over time, generate their own figurative authority. The typographic imaginary is posited as a literary phenomenon shared by different writers, a wider cultural understanding of printing, and a critical concept for unpicking the particular imaginative otherness that printing introduced to literature. Authors use the typographic imaginary to interrogate their place in an evolving media environment, to assess the value of the printed text, and to analyse the roles of other text-producing agents. This book treats a broad array of authors and forms: printers’ manuals; William Caxton’s paratexts; the pamphlet dialogues of Robert Copland and Ned Ward; poetic miscellanies; the prose fictions of William Baldwin, George Gascoigne, and Thomas Nashe; the poetry and prose of Edmund Spenser; writings by John Taylor and Alexander Pope. At its broadest, this study contributes to an understanding of how technology changes cultures. Located at the crossroads between literary, material, and book historical research, the particular intervention that this work makes is threefold. In describing the typographic imaginary, it proposes a new framework for analysis of print culture. It aims to focus critical engagement on symbolic representations of material forms. Finally, it describes a lineage of late medieval and early modern authors, stretching from the mid-fifteenth to the mid-eighteenth centuries, that are linked by their engagement of a particular aesthetic.

chapter |31 pages

Introduction

Print and the difference it makes

chapter 1|24 pages

Instructional texts and print symbolism

Christopher Plantin, Hieronymus Hornschuch, and Joseph Moxon

chapter 4|18 pages

Protestant printing and humanism in Beware the Cat

Undoing printing

chapter 5|19 pages

George Gascoigne and Richard Tottel

Negotiating manuscript and print in the poetic miscellany

chapter 6|22 pages

Edmund Spenser’s early and mid-career

Public image and machine horror

chapter 7|19 pages

St Paul’s Churchyard and the meanings of print

Pierce Penilesse His Supplication to the Diuell

chapter 8|9 pages

Conclusion

Love and loathing in Grub Street