The Afterlives of Adam Scriveyn: Chaucer's Scribe in Dantes's Inferno
Citation:
Brendan O'Connell, The Afterlives of Adam Scriveyn: Chaucer's Scribe in Dantes's Inferno, Ecdotica, 21, 2024, 231 - 245Download Item:
Abstract:
This essay examines Adam Scriveyn, a short poem by Geoffrey Chaucer that
explicitly addresses the vagaries of textual production, and whose critical history illustrates the unreliability of textual evidence, whether in the age of manuscript, print, or digital copies. The poem’s possible debt to Dante underscores
the importance of thinking across different linguistic and literary traditions as
we assess the contrasting evidence provided by textual witnesses. After considering how access to digital manuscripts of Dante can enrich our understanding
of English literary traditions, I show that the afterlife of Adam Scriveyn, including its digital presence, foregrounds the challenges and opportunities presented
by the widespread availability of digital copies of medieval manuscripts. Digital surrogates transform the ways we think about cultural contact, and prompt
us to consider how technologies of textual production shape the questions we
pose about literary and textual authority.
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http://people.tcd.ie/oconneb2Description:
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Author: O'Connell, Brendan
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Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Ecdotica;21;
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