48th
International Congress on Medieval Studies
9-12.V.2013
Kalamazoo [MI], Western Michigan University
Session
Un/making mistakes in Medieval manuscripts (organized
by B. M. Eggert, Humboldt University, Berlin – Ch. Schott, Erskine College,
South Carolina).
* Call for papers
(until 25.VIII.2012) *
While
scholars of medieval manuscripts usually focus either on the craftsmanship of
the codex or on how the copy work affects the text, the purpose of this session
is to shed light on errors, mistakes and obscurities in handwritten texts – and
what happens when they are noticed. Scribes often made mistakes when taking
dictation or copying a text, which manifest themselves in dittography or
omission of words as a result of eyeskip, etc. Likewise, the physical supports
themselves could be faulty, containing holes or irregular edges that forced
scribes to adjust or alter their copying activities to accommodate their
materials. Sometimes it remains obscure whether a textual phenomenon was
regarded an error or mistake, for example when illuminators of manuscripts
ignored written instructions concerning iconography or colours. Errors,
mistakes and obscurities could be handled in different ways: they could be
corrected openly, hushed up with more or less skill, marked with a comment – or
remain as they were. Each decision marks a distinct understanding of whether
correctness of a text was regarded as the most important aspect of a manuscript
– or whether a clean page and uninterrupted textual surface was deemed more
valuable.
By
inviting paper proposals from both scholars of text as well as scholars of
images, this session aims to explore the nature of errors, mistakes and
obscurities in medieval manuscripts as well as the “corrections” thereof to
gain insight into the contemporary assumptions about what a text should look
like.
Please send your abstract, along with a short cv and the paper proposal
form
to B. M. Eggert and Ch. Schott.
Source: APILIST
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