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E-grāmata: Playful Letters: A Study in Early Modern Alphabetics

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Impressions
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University of Iowa Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781609384753
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Impressions
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Nov-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University of Iowa Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781609384753

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"Alphabetic letters are ubiquitous, multivalent, and largely ignored. Playful Letters reveals their important cultural contributions through Alphabetics--a new interpretive model for understanding artistic production that attends to the signifying interplay of the graphemic, phonemic, lexical, and material capacities of letters. A key period for examining this interplay is the century and a half after the invention of printing, with its unique media ecology of print, manuscript, sound, and image. Drawing on Shakespeare, anthropomorphic typography, figured letters, and Cyrillic pedagogy and politics, this book explores the ways in which alphabetic thinking and writing inform literature and the visual arts, and it develops reading strategies for the "letterature" that underwrites such cultural production. Playful Letters begins with early modern engagements with the alphabet and the human body--an intersection where letterature emerges with startling force. The linking of letters and typography with bodies produced a new kind of literacy. In turn, educational habits that shaped letter learning and writing permeated the interrelated practices of typography, orthography, and poetry. These mutually informing processes render visible the persistent crumbling of words into letters and their reconstitution into narrative, poetry, and image. In addition to providing a rich history of literary and artistic alphabetic interrogation in early modern Western Europe and Russia, Playful Letters contributes to the continuous story of how people use new technologies and media to reflect on older forms, including the alphabet itself"--

Alphabetic letters are ubiquitous, multivalent, and largely ignored. Playful Letters reveals their important cultural contributions through Alphabetics—a new interpretive model for understanding artistic production that attends to the signifying interplay of the graphemic, phonemic, lexical, and material capacities of letters. A key period for examining this interplay is the century and a half after the invention of printing, with its unique media ecology of print, manuscript, sound, and image.

Drawing on Shakespeare, anthropomorphic typography, figured letters, and Cyrillic pedagogy and politics, this book explores the ways in which alphabetic thinking and writing inform literature and the visual arts, and it develops reading strategies for the “letterature” that underwrites such cultural production. Playful Letters begins with early modern engagements with the alphabet and the human body—an intersection where letterature emerges with startling force. The linking of letters and typography with bodies produced a new kind of literacy. In turn, educational habits that shaped letter learning and writing permeated the interrelated practices of typography, orthography, and poetry. These mutually informing processes render visible the persistent crumbling of words into letters and their reconstitution into narrative, poetry, and image.

In addition to providing a rich history of literary and artistic alphabetic interrogation in early modern Western Europe and Russia, Playful Letters contributes to the continuous story of how people use new technologies and media to reflect on older forms, including the alphabet itself. 
 
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(26)
Chapter One Body Type, Type Faces: The Human Typography of Geofroy Tory
27(26)
Chapter Two Body Language: Human Alphabets
53(44)
Chapter Three Type/Face in Albrecht Durer's Self-Portraiture
97(26)
Chapter Four "I of These Shall Wrest an Alphabet": Shakespearean Alphabetics
123(34)
Chapter Five Cyrillic Letters: Printers, Poetry, Primers, Peter I
157(58)
Conclusion 215(4)
Notes 219(44)
Bibliography 263(14)
Index 277
Erika Mary Boeckeler is an assistant professor of English at Northeastern University. She lives in Melrose, Massachusetts.