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New England Puritan sermon culture was primarily an oral
phenomenon, and yet its literary production has been understood
mainly through a print legacy. In Jeremiah's Scribes, Meredith
Marie Neuman turns to the notes taken by Puritan auditors in the
meetinghouse in order to fill out our sense of the lived experience
of the sermon. By reconstructing the aural culture of sermons,
Neuman shifts our attention from the pulpit to the pew to
demonstrate the many ways in which sermon auditors helped to shape
this dominant genre of Puritan New England. Tracing the material
transmission of sermon texts by readers and writers, hearers and
notetakers, Jeremiah's Scribes challenges the notion of stable
authorship by individual ministers. Instead, Neuman illuminates a
mode of textual production that pervaded communities and occurred
in the overlapping media of print, manuscript, and speech. Even
printed sermons, she demonstrates, bore the traces of their roots
in the oral culture of the meetinghouse. Bringing material
considerations to bear on anxieties over the perceived relationship
between divine and human language, Jeremiah's Scribes broadens our
understanding of all Puritan literature. Neuman examines the
controlling logic of the sermon in relation to nonsermonic
writing-such as conversion narrative-ultimately suggesting the
fundamental permeability among disparate genres of Puritan writing.
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