The Cambridge Companion to Textual Scholarship 2012
DOI: 10.1017/cco9781139044073.001
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Introduction Textual scholarship in the age of media consciousness

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“…5 Textual critics have always required as an essential competency a 'heightened awareness of medium as a methodological question'. 6 Jerome McGann identifies a cognate literary tradition from William Blake and William Morris to Pound in which this 'bibliographical imagination' produces 'an extensive record of its own making'. 7 This essay explores how such a 'textual condition' is manifested in The Cantos, whereby the poem's self-conscious understanding of its media ecology may bring digital potentialities into sharper focus, and how its 'bibliographical imagination' might produce a viable intersection of digital media and philology.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…5 Textual critics have always required as an essential competency a 'heightened awareness of medium as a methodological question'. 6 Jerome McGann identifies a cognate literary tradition from William Blake and William Morris to Pound in which this 'bibliographical imagination' produces 'an extensive record of its own making'. 7 This essay explores how such a 'textual condition' is manifested in The Cantos, whereby the poem's self-conscious understanding of its media ecology may bring digital potentialities into sharper focus, and how its 'bibliographical imagination' might produce a viable intersection of digital media and philology.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%