Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick

Given the importance of an accurate, well-documented base text for any kind of literary or linguistic analysis, my thesis will consider how the editorial bias forced on a popular and influential medieval romance, the Auchinleck Guy of Warwick, by its EETS editor Julius Zupitza misrepresents the roma...

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Main Author: Gardner, Traci Lynn
Other Authors: English
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/91098
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-910982020-09-26T05:37:31Z Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick Gardner, Traci Lynn English LD5655.V855 1986.G374 Books -- England -- History -- 1400-1600 Given the importance of an accurate, well-documented base text for any kind of literary or linguistic analysis, my thesis will consider how the editorial bias forced on a popular and influential medieval romance, the Auchinleck Guy of Warwick, by its EETS editor Julius Zupitza misrepresents the romance's manuscript presentation and has therefore prejudiced scholarship on fourteenth-century bookmaking. When Zupitza edited the Auchinleck version of the Guy romance, he seems to have had in mind the conventional textual principles upheld by his fellow Victorians. Unfortunately few of these Victorians produced texts which would today be considered acceptable. Though Victorian productions of many works have been replaced by modern editions, Zupitza' s Guy is the only available text of the romance. The failure of Zupitza's text is complicated by the fact that the Auchinleck Manuscript and the Auchinleck Guy, because of its unique division into three poems, figure prominently in medieval bookmaking theory. While three medieval bookmaking theories focus on the Auchinleck, none of the prominent Auchinleck scholars - Laura Loomis, Pamela Robinson, or Timothy Shonk - has recognized how Zupi tza unintentionally manipulates the Auchinleck Guy with his textual presentation of the romance. By indicating the errors and misleading practices which have shaped Zupitza's presentation of the Auchinleck Guy, I plan to establish the necessity for a new, more accurate critical edition of the Auchinleck Guy and to suggest how a more accurate critical edition can influence literary and bibliographical studies. M.A. 2019-07-03T18:56:56Z 2019-07-03T18:56:56Z 1986 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/91098 en_US OCLC# 14773224 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vi, 79 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1986.G374
Books -- England -- History -- 1400-1600
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1986.G374
Books -- England -- History -- 1400-1600
Gardner, Traci Lynn
Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick
description Given the importance of an accurate, well-documented base text for any kind of literary or linguistic analysis, my thesis will consider how the editorial bias forced on a popular and influential medieval romance, the Auchinleck Guy of Warwick, by its EETS editor Julius Zupitza misrepresents the romance's manuscript presentation and has therefore prejudiced scholarship on fourteenth-century bookmaking. When Zupitza edited the Auchinleck version of the Guy romance, he seems to have had in mind the conventional textual principles upheld by his fellow Victorians. Unfortunately few of these Victorians produced texts which would today be considered acceptable. Though Victorian productions of many works have been replaced by modern editions, Zupitza' s Guy is the only available text of the romance. The failure of Zupitza's text is complicated by the fact that the Auchinleck Manuscript and the Auchinleck Guy, because of its unique division into three poems, figure prominently in medieval bookmaking theory. While three medieval bookmaking theories focus on the Auchinleck, none of the prominent Auchinleck scholars - Laura Loomis, Pamela Robinson, or Timothy Shonk - has recognized how Zupi tza unintentionally manipulates the Auchinleck Guy with his textual presentation of the romance. By indicating the errors and misleading practices which have shaped Zupitza's presentation of the Auchinleck Guy, I plan to establish the necessity for a new, more accurate critical edition of the Auchinleck Guy and to suggest how a more accurate critical edition can influence literary and bibliographical studies. === M.A.
author2 English
author_facet English
Gardner, Traci Lynn
author Gardner, Traci Lynn
author_sort Gardner, Traci Lynn
title Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick
title_short Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick
title_full Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick
title_fullStr Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick
title_full_unstemmed Toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for Guy of Warwick
title_sort toward an understanding of medieval bookmaking: the case for guy of warwick
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/91098
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