Textual distortion /

"Distortion" is nearly always understood as negative. It can be defined as perversion, impairment, caricature, corruption, misrepresentation, or deviation. Unlike its close neighbour, "disruption", it remains resolutely associated with the undesirable, the lost, or the deceptive....

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Bibliografische gegevens
Coauteur: English Association
Andere auteurs: Treharne, Elaine M. (Redacteur), Walker, Greg, 1959- (Redacteur)
Formaat: Licensed eBooks
Taal:Engels
Gepubliceerd in: Cambridge : D.S. Brewer 2017.
Reeks:Essays and studies (London, England : 1950) ; 70.
Online toegang:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7722/j.ctt1wx93g1
Inhoudsopgave:
  • The curious production and reconstruction of Oxford, Bodleian Library, Junius 85 and 86 / Matthew Aiello
  • Through a glass darkly, or, rethinking medieval materiality: a tale of carpets, screens, and parchment / Emma Cayley
  • Distortion, ideology, time: proletarian aesthetics in the work of Lionel Britton / Aaron Kelly
  • Shakespeare and Korea: mutual remappings / Daeyong (Dan) Kim
  • Dictionary distortions / Sarah Ogilvie
  • Where do Indigenous origin stories and empowered objects fit into a literary history of the American continent? / Timothy Powell
  • Distortion in textual object facsimile production: a liability or an asset? / Giovanni Scorcionni
  • The uncanny reformation: revenant texts and distorted time in Henrician England / Greg Walker
  • The presence of the book / Claude Willan.