Increasing interest is being shown in the intersections between
literary and cultural history and in the material dimensions of the
text. Evelyn B. Tribble argues that far from being extratextual, as
many scholars have contended, marginal commentary and text fuse
together to form the page's inscribed identity. By tracing the
connections between marginal apparatus, authority, and authorship,
she demonstrates that changes in book production had profound
consequences for the changing relations among readers, writers, and
cultural authority in the early modern period. Margins and
Marginality is, to date, the only book-length study of the marginal
apparatus of Renaissance books.
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