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Middle English Manuscripts and their Legacies

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This volume celebrates and extends the extraordinary and transformative work of Ian Doyle on medieval manuscripts and their legacies. Eighteen original contributions by eminent international schol...
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  • 09 February 2022
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This volume celebrates and extends the extraordinary and transformative work of Ian Doyle on medieval manuscripts and their legacies. Eighteen original contributions by eminent international scholars of manuscript studies and history of the book present new research on textual issues, manuscript preservation and circulation, manuscripts and print, and the afterlives of manuscripts. Essays adopt the multi-faceted and nuanced approaches to manuscript studies and history of the book characteristic of Ian Doyle’s work, taking up topics to which his research has drawn attention, extending his studies of particular manuscripts, scribes and networks, and exploring his remarkable contributions to the field.

Contributors are: Ralph Hanna, Susan Powell, Julia Boffey, David Rundle, James Willoughby, Carol Meale, Martha Driver, William Marx, Veronica O'Mara, Richard Gameson, Kathleen Scott, Margaret Connolly, Richard Beadle, A. S. G. Edwards, Elizabeth Rainey, Pamela Robinson, Toshi Takamiya, Linne Mooney, and Derek Pearsall.
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Price: $183.00
Pages: 424
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Library of the Written Word
Publication Date: 09 February 2022
ISBN: 9789004472143
Format: Other
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Corinne Saunders, D.Phil. (1991), Oxford, is Professor of Medieval Literature and co-directs the Institute for Medical Humanities, Durham University. Her publications include Magic and the Supernatural in Medieval English Romance (2010) and Visions and Voice-Hearing in Medieval and Early Modern Contexts (2020).

Richard Lawrie, Ph.D (2013), Durham University, served as Vice-Master and Senior Tutor of University College, Durham, and was previously Secretary of the Senior Common Room of University College, a role in which he worked closely with Ian Doyle. He has taught in the departments of History and Education at Durham.

Laurie Atkinson is a PhD student in the Department of English Studies, Durham University, preparing for examination. He has published on Thomas Hoccleve, Stephen Hawes, and William Dunbar, and is now developing a postdoctoral research project on early English print.