Self-Annotated Literary Works 1300-1900: An Extensive Collection of Titles and Selected Metadata

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10900/127071
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:21-dspace-1270711
http://dx.doi.org/10.15496/publikation-68434
Dokumentart: ResearchData
Date: 2022
Language: English
Faculty: 5 Philosophische Fakultät
Department: Anglistik, Amerikanistik
DDC Classifikation: 400 - Language and Linguistics
800 - Literature and rhetoric
820 - English and Old English literatures
830 - Literatures of Germanic languages
840 - Literatures of Romance languages
850 - Italian, Romanian and related literatures
860 - Spanish and Portuguese literatures
Other Keywords: Annotation
Anmerkung
Selbstkommentar
Fußnote
Literaturgeschichte
Randbemerkung
Buchdruck
Leseverhalten
Romantik
Aufklärung
Paratext
Neuzeit
Selbstannotation
annotation
commentary
endnote
footnote
authorial annotation
literary annotation
paratext
self-commentary
self-annotation
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Abstract:

[This is a revised version of the version published in 2021: http://hdl.handle.net/10900/111993. Please refer to the pdf titled "Information on the Collection" for more detailed information.] This collection was created in the context of my PhD thesis titled "The Author as Annotator: Ambiguities of Self-Annotation in Pope and Byron" (Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen, 2021, GRK 1808 “Ambiguität”, DFG-Projektnummer: 198647426). It lists more than 1100 literary works published between 1300 and 1900 that feature self-annotations, i.e. marginal notes, footnotes, or endnotes written by the author of the work. Self-annotations here only refer to notes that were published in a work, not private, handwritten comments in the author’s own copy. The aim of this collection is threefold. First of all, it shows the prevalence and variety of literary self-annotation before 1900. While authorial notes in post-1900 literature have received a considerable amount of critical attention, the number and ‘experimentality’ of earlier self-annotations is often underestimated among literary scholars. The present collection strives to correct this view. Secondly, the collection reveals general tendencies in the field of literary self-annotation, providing tentative answers to questions like ‘when did it become popular to use both footnotes and endnotes in the same work?’. Thirdly and most importantly, this collection is meant to provide an incentive and starting point for further research by laying the (albeit yet insufficient) groundwork for quantitative research, by including a multitude of now-forgotten works, and by citing relevant secondary literature on as many titles as possible.

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