Glossing Practice: Comparative Perspectives

Author:   Franck Cinato ,  Aimée Lahaussois ,  John B. Whitman ,  Alderik H. Blom
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9781793612809


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 February 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Glossing Practice: Comparative Perspectives


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Author:   Franck Cinato ,  Aimée Lahaussois ,  John B. Whitman ,  Alderik H. Blom
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.80cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.70cm
Weight:   0.540kg
ISBN:  

9781793612809


ISBN 10:   1793612803
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 February 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

I. Comparative Glossing Practice 1. Continuity and Discontinuity: Glossing as a Dynamic System 2. The Five Services of Sanskrit Commentaries and Diomedes’ Grammar Program II. Glosses as Tools for Access to Knowledge 3. Glossing Glosses: Methods for Transcribing and Glossing Japanese kundoku Texts 4. Issues in Dictionaries Recording Kunten Glosses 5. Interconnecting Knowledge in Early Medieval Glosses 6. Auraicept na nÉces and the Art of Medicine III. Glosses and Linguistics 7. Dry-point Grammatical Glosses 8. The Pragmatics of Paratextual Paraphernalia 9. A Revised Typology for the St Gall Priscian Glosses 10. Glossing Practices in 1850–1911: Descriptions of Languages with Complex Verbal Morphology

Reviews

Glosses may be small and insignificant to the eye, but for premodern readers they were the all-important keys that gave the reader access to books containing essential cultural knowledge. The linguistic and cultural practice of glossing was once widespread in East Asia, South Asia, Europe and elsewhere, and in this indispensable book, glosses at last get their first cross-cultural treatment in a range of stimulating essays that bring to life the glosses attached to texts in classical Chinese, Sanskrit, Latin and other languages. Glosses came into their own when written texts were alien, challenging or just plain difficult, but the global reach of this practice has hardly ever been addressed. Anybody working on knowledge transfer in premodern societies needs to understand how glosses worked to facilitate comprehension and render knowledge transfer possible and the essays in this book furnish cutting-edge research on the uses and functions of glosses.--Peter Kornicki, University of Cambridge What is a gloss? Our language to talk about glosses and our thinking about them is fuzzy. Words added around a text or in between the lines are a universal practice in writing cultures across times and places, but they serve a multitude of purposes and take on as many shapes. In this book, the concept is thoroughly scrutinized, dissected into single components: functionalities, characteristics and typologies. Only then the real effort of comparing can take off and bring us truly new insights. And with that, this book breaks fresh ground.--Mariken Teeuwen, Huygens Institute; Leiden University This volume is a forceful demand to reorient our tools of investigation into objects of critical inquiry. The assembled essays--which range across granular microanalysis of individual texts; comparative juxtaposition of disparate eras, literary traditions, and methodologies; and the inductive positing of universals--together make a compelling case for comparative glossing as a vital new field of cross-disciplinary relevance.--Brian Steininger, Princeton University


Glosses may be small and insignificant to the eye, but for premodern readers they were the all-important keys that gave the reader access to books containing essential cultural knowledge. The linguistic and cultural practice of glossing was once widespread in East Asia, South Asia, Europe and elsewhere, and in this indispensable book, glosses at last get their first cross-cultural treatment in a range of stimulating essays that bring to life the glosses attached to texts in classical Chinese, Sanskrit, Latin and other languages. Glosses came into their own when written texts were alien, challenging or just plain difficult, but the global reach of this practice has hardly ever been addressed. Anybody working on knowledge transfer in premodern societies needs to understand how glosses worked to facilitate comprehension and render knowledge transfer possible and the essays in this book furnish cutting-edge research on the uses and functions of glosses.--Peter Kornicki, University of Cambridge This volume is a forceful demand to reorient our tools of investigation into objects of critical inquiry. The assembled essays--which range across granular microanalysis of individual texts; comparative juxtaposition of disparate eras, literary traditions, and methodologies; and the inductive positing of universals--together make a compelling case for comparative glossing as a vital new field of cross-disciplinary relevance.--Brian Steininger, Princeton University What is a gloss? Our language to talk about glosses and our thinking about them is fuzzy. Words added around a text or in between the lines are a universal practice in writing cultures across times and places, but they serve a multitude of purposes and take on as many shapes. In this book, the concept is thoroughly scrutinized, dissected into single components: functionalities, characteristics and typologies. Only then the real effort of comparing can take off and bring us truly new insights. And with that, this book breaks fresh ground.--Mariken Teeuwen, Huygens Institute; Leiden University


Glosses may be small and insignificant to the eye, but for premodern readers they were the all-important keys that gave the reader access to books containing essential cultural knowledge. The linguistic and cultural practice of glossing was once widespread in East Asia, South Asia, Europe and elsewhere, and in this indispensable book, glosses at last get their first cross-cultural treatment in a range of stimulating essays that bring to life the glosses attached to texts in classical Chinese, Sanskrit, Latin and other languages. Glosses came into their own when written texts were alien, challenging or just plain difficult, but the global reach of this practice has hardly ever been addressed. Anybody working on knowledge transfer in premodern societies needs to understand how glosses worked to facilitate comprehension and render knowledge transfer possible and the essays in this book furnish cutting-edge research on the uses and functions of glosses. This volume is a forceful demand to reorient our tools of investigation into objects of critical inquiry. The assembled essays--which range across granular microanalysis of individual texts; comparative juxtaposition of disparate eras, literary traditions, and methodologies; and the inductive positing of universals--together make a compelling case for comparative glossing as a vital new field of cross-disciplinary relevance. What is a gloss? Our language to talk about glosses and our thinking about them is fuzzy. Words added around a text or in between the lines are a universal practice in writing cultures across times and places, but they serve a multitude of purposes and take on as many shapes. In this book, the concept is thoroughly scrutinized, dissected into single components: functionalities, characteristics and typologies. Only then the real effort of comparing can take off and bring us truly new insights. And with that, this book breaks fresh ground.


This volume is a forceful demand to reorient our tools of investigation into objects of critical inquiry. The assembled essays--which range across granular microanalysis of individual texts; comparative juxtaposition of disparate eras, literary traditions, and methodologies; and the inductive positing of universals--together make a compelling case for comparative glossing as a vital new field of cross-disciplinary relevance.--Brian Steininger, Princeton University


Author Information

Franck Cinato is full-time researcher at the French National Centre for Scientific Research. Aimée Lahaussois is a linguist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research. John B. Whitman is professor of linguistics at Cornell University and the Department of Crosslinguistic Studies at the National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics.

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