The pleasures of contamination evidence, text, and voice in textual studies /
Greetham, David
The pleasures of contamination evidence, text, and voice in textual studies / [Texte imprimé] : David Greetham - Bloomington : Indiana University Press, cop. 2010 - 1 vol. (385 p.) ; 24 cm - Textual cultures : theory and praxis .
Bibliogr. p. 315-362
Introduction: truthiness in an age of contamination -- Part 1. The contamination of evidence: The resistance to philology; Contamination and/of resistance; Textual forensics; Facts, truefacts, factoids, or, why are they still saying those things about epistemology? -- Part 2. The contamination of text: Who's in, who's out: the cultural poetics of archival exclusion; Phylum-tree-rhizome; Is it morphin time? -- Part 3. The contamination of voice: "what does it matter who is speaking," someone said, "what does it matter who is speaking?" (Greetham version), or "what does it matter who is speaking?": editorial recuperation of the estranged author" (Eggert version); Romancing the text, medievalizing the book; The philosophical discourse of [textuality]?; The telephone directory and Dr. Seuss: scholarly editing after Feist v. Rural telephone -- Epilogue: the limits of contamination
978-0-253-22216-9
Criticism, Textual Intertextuality Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
801.959
The pleasures of contamination evidence, text, and voice in textual studies / [Texte imprimé] : David Greetham - Bloomington : Indiana University Press, cop. 2010 - 1 vol. (385 p.) ; 24 cm - Textual cultures : theory and praxis .
Bibliogr. p. 315-362
Introduction: truthiness in an age of contamination -- Part 1. The contamination of evidence: The resistance to philology; Contamination and/of resistance; Textual forensics; Facts, truefacts, factoids, or, why are they still saying those things about epistemology? -- Part 2. The contamination of text: Who's in, who's out: the cultural poetics of archival exclusion; Phylum-tree-rhizome; Is it morphin time? -- Part 3. The contamination of voice: "what does it matter who is speaking," someone said, "what does it matter who is speaking?" (Greetham version), or "what does it matter who is speaking?": editorial recuperation of the estranged author" (Eggert version); Romancing the text, medievalizing the book; The philosophical discourse of [textuality]?; The telephone directory and Dr. Seuss: scholarly editing after Feist v. Rural telephone -- Epilogue: the limits of contamination
978-0-253-22216-9
Criticism, Textual Intertextuality Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
801.959