ENGL 593 -- Winter Quarter 2006

Oral Scribe (w/CLit 596A) Remley MW 11:30-1:20

Oral Tradition and Scribal Texts
Theorists of literacy and textuality often distinguish four main types of textual culture: (1) oral or "memory" culture, which has existed since antiquity and survives in some parts of the world to the present day; (2) early literary or "scribal" culture, emerging with the invention of writing; (3) "print culture," enabled by the power of the press; and, most recently, (4) the culture of "electronic texts" (or of "hypertext"), now expanding with the proliferation of texts and data on the Internet, among other technologies of mass communication. The present course is a component in a series of graduate seminars addressing these topics, and addressing theoretical and critical issues in Textual Studies generally. Individual sessions will involve a wide range of special presentations by guest lecturers from several institutions. The "Oral and Scribal Texts" seminar will mainly address the first two areas noted above, oral and scribal cultures, but this will nevertheless provide an opportunity to demonstrate some of the most recent uses of hypertext for the study of texts as well. Class discussion and several invited speakers will address the history of writing, manuscript illumination, and various cultural aspects of the ancient writing-hall (or scriptorium). The series has been developed by the campus-wide Textual Studies Intitiative, and all seminars are cross-listed among the offerings of English, Comparative Literature, and Center for the Humanities. Course credit may count toward the Critical Theory concentration in Comparative Literature.

Course Texts:
Lord, Singer of Tales, 2nd ed. (2002)
Bischoff, Latin Paleography

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