Romantic Readers: The Evidence of MarginaliaWhen readers jot down notes in their books, they reveal something of themselves—what they believe, what amuses or annoys them, what they have read before. But a close examination of marginalia also discloses diverse and fascinating details about the time in which they are written. This book explores reading practices in the Romantic Age through an analysis of some 2,000 books annotated by British readers between 1790 and 1830. |
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The periodicals naturally cheered them on. The Gentleman's Magazine of October 1800 reported the opening of an Athenaeum at Liverpool, with a newsroom for papers and conversation on the ground floor and a presumably quieter library ...
It must have felt like a natural thing to do. Humanist educational theory encouraged such habits. Erasmus had recommended a system of marks to highlight di√erent kinds of beauties in a work and declared that he preferred a battered ...
Schoolbooks that have survived from the period naturally contain traces of the sort of parental guidance and purposeful reading that the Edgeworths and their like recommended. The commonest forms of children's marginalia are ownership ...
His notes on Harwood Busick's lectures on natural history and comparative anatomy in 1812 indicate the lecturer's eclectic approach to the subject, for they include a quotation from Pliny, references to recent scientific publications, ...
In the realm of natural history the vital unit of information was the firsthand observation, preferably taken from the wild or from preserved specimens in a collection or, as second best, from an authoritative written record.
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Romantic readers: the evidence of marginalia
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictIn this follow-up to her magisterial Marginalia: Readers Writing in Books , Jackson (English, Univ. of Toronto) focuses on annotations that were made in books during the Romantic Age--that exciting ... Read full review
Contents
1 | |
60 | |
2 Socializing with Books | 121 |
3 Custodians to Posterity | 198 |
4 The Reading Mind | 249 |
Conclusion | 299 |
Notes | 307 |
Bibliography of Books with Manuscript Notes | 325 |
Bibliography of Secondary Sources | 340 |
Index | 353 |