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Designing English: Early Literature on the Page
Bodleian Library Publishing, 2017 Cloth: 978-1-85124-475-1 Library of Congress Classification Z106.5.G7W345 2018 Dewey Decimal Classification 091.0942
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Early manuscripts in the English language included religious works, plays, romances, poetry, and songs, as well as charms, notebooks, and scientific documents. Given this vast array, how did scribes choose to arrange the words and images on the page, and what visual guides did they give early readers to help them use and understand each manuscript? Working beyond the traditions established for Latin, scribes of English needed to be more inventive, using each book as an opportunity to redesign. Surveying eight centuries of graphic design in manuscripts and inscriptions, Designing English focuses on the craft, agency, and intentions of scribes, painters, and engravers from the Anglo-Saxon to the early Tudor periods. The book examines format, layout, and decoration, as well as bilingual manuscripts and oral recitations, weighing the balance of ingenuity and copying, imagination and practicality, behind early English book design. With over ninety illustrations, drawn especially from the holdings of the Bodleian Library, Designing English gives a comprehensive overview of English books and other material texts across the Middle Ages. See other books on: Bodleian Library | Books | Exhibitions | Manuscripts, Medieval | Page See other titles from Bodleian Library Publishing |
Nearby on shelf for Books (General). Writing. Paleography / Manuscripts. Paleography:
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