Forthcoming: Commenting and Commentary as an Interpretive Mode in Medieval and Early Modern Europe

by nm

Commenting and Commentary as an Interpretive Mode in Medieval and Early Modern Europe

Edited by Christina Lechtermann and Markus Stock

Christina Lechtermann / Markus Stock – Introduction: Commenting and Commentary as an Interpretive Mode in Medieval and Early Modern Europe

Erik Kwakkel – The Pro-Active Scribe: Preparing the Margins of Annotated Manuscripts

Kristin Böse – Thinking from the Margins: Opening and Closing Illuminations and their Commentary Functions around 1000

Drew Hicks – Reading Texts within Texts: The Special Case of Lemmata

Christina Lechtermann – The In-/Coherences of Narrative Commentary: Commentarial Forms in the Anegenge

Elisa Brilli – Dante’s Self-Commentary and the Call for Interpretation

Christine Ott and Philip Stockbrugger – Spiritualizing Petrarchism, “Poeticizing” the Bible: Two Counter-Reformation Self-Commentaries

Andrea Baldan – The Power of Glosses: Francesco Fulvio Frugoni’s Self-Commentary and Literary Criticism in the Tribunal della Critica

Magnus Ulrich Ferber – Commenting on a Purged Model: The M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton libri omnes novis commentariis illustrati of the Jesuit Matthäus Rader (1602)