THE EDITION AS ARGUMENT, 1550-1750
THE EDITION AS ARGUMENT, 1550-1750
16-17 July 2014
Queen Mary, University of London
Call for Papers
Keynote Speakers:
Professor Cathy Shrank (University of Sheffield)
Professor Henry Woudhuysen (Oxford University)
Confirmed speakers: Kate Bennett, Christopher Burlinson,
Dan Carey, David Colclough, Alice Eardley, Nick McDowell, Leah Marcus, Valerie
Rumbold; Richard Serjeantson, Gary Stringer
From the philology of Lorenzo Valla to twentieth-century
debates over copy-text to the new frontier of digital humanities, textual
scholars have always argued over the making of meaning. Indeed, argument is
integral to the practice of editing: to privilege one reading is to discard
another. Bibliographical, historical, and textual choices: these ineluctably
and often invisibly inform our larger understanding of the text, the author,
and the culture from which they emerge. They can destabilise or confirm our
most basic assumptions, from a single word – what is “blew”? – to the nature of
the book: what is a text? what is an author? what is an edition?
This landmark two-day conference will draw together
experienced and new editors, to analyse and to celebrate editions in progress
and to inspire a new generation of editors and editions. Hosted by the
AHRC-funded Complete Works of Sir Thomas Browne (forthcoming, OUP), the event
will explore the future of editing in universities and offer perspectives from
curators and publishers. One direct print outcome will be a handbook on editing
sixteenth and seventeenth-century documents.
We invite proposals for 20-25 minute papers on these and
other arguments. Topics might include, but are not limited to:
establishing
copy-text
representing
multiplicity: texts, states, revisions
error
and the problem of authorial intention
non-author-centric
editions
composing
editorial mise-en-page
the
role of annotation
editorial
theory
the
case for new editions and the future of editing
digital
humanities
the
impact of editing and textual scholarship
Abstracts should be no more than 300 words long and
should be sent to Harriet Phillips (h.phillips@qmul.ac.uk)
and Claire Bryony Williams (c.b.williams@qmul.ac.uk)
by 1st December 2013.