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Cultures of Correspondence in Early Modern Britain (Hardcover)
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Cultures of Correspondence in Early Modern Britain (Hardcover)
Series: Material Texts
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The letter is a powerfully evocative form that has gained in
resonance as the habits of personal letter writing have declined in
a digital age. But faith in the letter as evidence of the intimate
thoughts of individuals underplays the sophisticated ways letters
functioned in the past. In Cultures of Correspondence in Early
Modern Britain leading scholars approach the letter from a variety
of disciplinary perspectives to uncover the habits, forms, and
secrets of letter writing. Where material features of the letter
have often been ignored by past generations fixated on the text
alone, contributors to this volume examine how such elements as
handwriting, seals, ink, and the arrangement of words on the
manuscript page were significant carriers of meaning alongside
epistolary rhetorics. The chapters here also explore the travels of
the letter, uncovering the many means through which correspondence
reached a reader and the ways in which the delivery of letters
preoccupied contemporaries. At the same time, they reveal how other
practices, such as the use of cipher and the designs of forgery,
threatened to subvert the surveillance and reading of letters. The
anxiety of early modern letter writers over the vulnerability of
correspondence is testament to the deep dependence of the culture
on the letter. Beyond the letter as a material object, Cultures of
Correspondence sheds light on textual habits. Individual chapters
study the language of letter writers to reveal that what appears to
be a personal and unvarnished expression of the writer's thought is
in fact a deliberate, skillful exercise in managing the conventions
and expectations of the form. If letters were a prominent and
ingrained part of the cultural life of the early modern period,
they also enjoyed textual and archival afterlives whose stories are
rarely told. Too often studied only in the case of figures already
celebrated for their historical or literary significance, the
letter in Cultures of Correspondence emerges as the most vital and
wide-ranging material, textual form of the early modern period.
Contributors: Nadine Akkerman, Mark Brayshay, Christopher
Burlinson, James Daybell, Jonathan Gibson, Andrew Gordon, Arnold
Hunt, Lynne Magnusson, Michelle O'Callaghan, Alan Stewart, Andrew
Zurcher.
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