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Who Owns Literature?

Who Owns Literature?

Who Owns Literature?

Early Modernity's Orphaned Texts
Jane Tylus, Yale University, Connecticut
January 2025
Available
Hardback
9781009539197

    Interest in material culture has produced a rigorous body of scholarship that considers the dynamics of licensing, permissions, and patronage - an ongoing history of the estrangement of works from their authors. Additionally, translation studies is enabling new ways to think about the emergence of European vernaculars and the reappropriation of classical and early Christian texts. This Element emerges from these intersecting stories. How did early modern authors say goodbye to their works; how do translators and editors articulate their duty to the dead or those incapable of caring for their work; what happens once censorship is invoked in the name of other forms of protection? The notion of the work as orphan, sent out and unable to return to its author, will take us from Horace to Dante, Montaigne, Anne Bradstreet, and others as we reflect on the relevance of the vocabularies of loss, charity, and licence for literature.

    Product details

    January 2025
    Hardback
    9781009539197
    84 pages
    229 × 152 × 6 mm
    0.259kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Prologue
    • 1. Lexicons of goodbyes
    • 2. Speaking for/to the dead
    • 3. Revenants: when stolen words come back
    • 4. Epilogue
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Jane Tylus , Yale University, Connecticut