Miscellaneous Order: Manuscript Culture and the Early Modern Organization of Knowledge

Author:   Angus Vine (Lecturer in Early Modern Literature, University of Stirling)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198809708


Pages:   302
Publication Date:   24 January 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Miscellaneous Order: Manuscript Culture and the Early Modern Organization of Knowledge


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Author:   Angus Vine (Lecturer in Early Modern Literature, University of Stirling)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.40cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 24.10cm
Weight:   0.608kg
ISBN:  

9780198809708


ISBN 10:   0198809700
Pages:   302
Publication Date:   24 January 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  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

Introduction: Defining the Miscellany 1: Commonplace Failure 2: The Early Modern Omnigatherum 3: Chorography and Antiquarian Compilation 4: Merchants and Miscellany Making 5: Sir Hugh Plat's Network of Notebooks 6: Bacon's Filing Coda: Whither Miscellany Culture? Appendix: John Ramsey's 'Catalogus Authorum' Glossary Bibliography

Reviews

It is a valuable study for scholars interested in better understanding miscellanies and early modern manuscript culture more generally. * Simone Hanebaum, The Seventeenth Century *


[a] remarkable contribution to recent scholarship ... Vine's formalist approach to the analysis of his source materials offers an innovative contribution to the field because of its resistance to an exclusive interest in particular subjects, personalities, or contents that have defined other major contributions to the fields of textual scholarship, critical bibliography, and manuscript studies in recent years. Vine argues effectively that the early modern material forms and practices embedded in manuscript miscellanies reflect how early modern community developed in the 'broader intellectual context of manuscript culture' * Jason E. Cohen, The Library * Miscellaneous Order can be used as a reference on particular topics, but because Vine weaves important themes through each of the book's chapters, it rewards linear reading. Of obvious interest to manuscript scholars and book historians, the book also has much to offer intellectual historians, historians of science, and literary critics, making its potential audience as heterogeneous as the books it describes. In short, Miscellaneous Order is an important contribution to our understanding of early modern manuscript miscellanies as complex, diverse, occasionally puzzling, and invariably rich documents. * Erin A. McCarthy, Renaissance Studies * Miscellaneous Order balances the theoretical and the practical most admirably. This really is an exceptionally good book: a delight to read and full of information and insight. * John Considine, Notes and Queries * Having read Vine's book...historians might no longer put an odd volume aside, take note of this as a miscellaneous item, and move on. Instead, some might seek to understand what these texts tell us about the rich and diverse figures that once produced them. * Tom Toelle, Universitat Hamburg, H-Soz-Kult * It is a valuable study for scholars interested in better understanding miscellanies and early modern manuscript culture more generally. * Simone Hanebaum, The Seventeenth Century *


It is a valuable study for scholars interested in better understanding miscellanies and early modern manuscript culture more generally. * Simone Hanebaum, The Seventeenth Century * Having read Vine's book...historians might no longer put an odd volume aside, take note of this as a miscellaneous item, and move on. Instead, some might seek to understand what these texts tell us about the rich and diverse figures that once produced them. * Tom Toelle, Universitat Hamburg, H-Soz-Kult * Miscellaneous Order balances the theoretical and the practical most admirably. This really is an exceptionally good book: a delight to read and full of information and insight. * John Considine, Notes and Queries * Miscellaneous Order can be used as a reference on particular topics, but because Vine weaves important themes through each of the book's chapters, it rewards linear reading. Of obvious interest to manuscript scholars and book historians, the book also has much to offer intellectual historians, historians of science, and literary critics, making its potential audience as heterogeneous as the books it describes. In short, Miscellaneous Order is an important contribution to our understanding of early modern manuscript miscellanies as complex, diverse, occasionally puzzling, and invariably rich documents. * Erin A. McCarthy, Renaissance Studies * [a] remarkable contribution to recent scholarship ... Vine's formalist approach to the analysis of his source materials offers an innovative contribution to the field because of its resistance to an exclusive interest in particular subjects, personalities, or contents that have defined other major contributions to the fields of textual scholarship, critical bibliography, and manuscript studies in recent years. Vine argues effectively that the early modern material forms and practices embedded in manuscript miscellanies reflect how early modern community developed in the 'broader intellectual context of manuscript culture' * Jason E. Cohen, The Library *


"This is a richly researched, elegantly written and important book that everyone interested in early modern manuscript construction, textual composition, information management and knowledge discovery will want to read. * Jonathan Gibson, The Spenser Review * Miscellaneous Order is an important book that achieves its ambition, which is to help us to understand the habits of collecting and organizing material from diverse sources in early modern England. It persuaded me that miscellany-making lies at the heart of early modern intellectual culture. This book offers a big-picture view of the history of the early modern miscellany. * Jennifer Richards, Modern Language Review * [a] remarkable contribution to recent scholarship ... Vine's formalist approach to the analysis of his source materials offers an innovative contribution to the field because of its resistance to an exclusive interest in particular subjects, personalities, or contents that have defined other major contributions to the fields of textual scholarship, critical bibliography, and manuscript studies in recent years. Vine argues effectively that the early modern material forms and practices embedded in manuscript miscellanies reflect how early modern community developed in the 'broader intellectual context of manuscript culture' * Jason E. Cohen, The Library * Miscellaneous Order can be used as a reference on particular topics, but because Vine weaves important themes through each of the book's chapters, it rewards linear reading. Of obvious interest to manuscript scholars and book historians, the book also has much to offer intellectual historians, historians of science, and literary critics, making its potential audience as heterogeneous as the books it describes. In short, Miscellaneous Order is an important contribution to our understanding of early modern manuscript miscellanies as complex, diverse, occasionally puzzling, and invariably rich documents. * Erin A. McCarthy, Renaissance Studies * Miscellaneous Order balances the theoretical and the practical most admirably. This really is an exceptionally good book: a delight to read and full of information and insight. * John Considine, Notes and Queries * Having read Vine's book...historians might no longer put an odd volume aside, take note of this as a ""miscellaneous"" item, and move on. Instead, some might seek to understand what these texts tell us about the rich and diverse figures that once produced them. * Tom Tölle, Universität Hamburg, H-Soz-Kult * It is a valuable study for scholars interested in better understanding miscellanies and early modern manuscript culture more generally. * Simone Hanebaum, The Seventeenth Century *"


Author Information

Angus Vine is Lecturer in Early Modern Literature at the University of Stirling. His research focuses on the literary and intellectual history of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England. His interests include manuscript culture, book history, textual scholarship, epistemology, antiquarianism, and editing. He is the author of In Defiance of Time: Antiquarian Writing in Early Modern England (2010, with Abigail Shinn), The Copious Text: Encyclopaedic Books in Early Modern England (2014), and (with Katie Halsey) Shakespeare and Authority: Citations, Conceptions, and Constructions (2018). He is currently editing Volume 3 of The Oxford Francis Bacon (with Richard Serjeantson) and Volume 4 of The Oxford Traherne (with Ann Moss).

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