Handwriting in Early America : A Media History
Handwriting in Early America : A Media History
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ISBN No.: 9781625347206
Pages: 296
Year: 202308
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 136.62
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"This collection stands out for its attention to the way non-Anglo Americans participated in [handwriting]: fully one-third of the essays take the work of Black or Indigenous hands as their primary focus."-- Kirstin Silva Gruesz , Winterthur Portfolio "The diversity of this work is unmatched. Required reading for those looking for an introduction to media history and book studies."-- Meagan Schulman , New England Journal of History " Handwriting in Early America treats material practices of manual inscription and makes a strong case for their key role, even during an age of print, in the formation of self and society.Readers will learn, accordingly, to take a skeptical view of current doomsaying predictions that handwriting will soon become a thing of the past, thanks to the dominance of digital technologies of communication."-- Deidre Shauna Lynch , Eighteenth-Century Studies " Handwriting in Early America takes an open posture toward the digital. As Mattes urges in his introduction to the collection, we must expand our ideas of what counts in our analyses of handwritten manuscripts and their afterlives."-- Kristina Bross , American Literary History "Whether thinking critically about what genre a handwritten object embodies, what its material specificities tell us, or how anxieties over the medium have existed in the past, Handwriting in Early America provides digestible examples to spur you.


Because, as it turns out, being able to read and understand handwriting isn't just for 'steampunk fantasies.' It's a powerful tool for archival and literary studies, and this volume shows just how far scholars can push our thinking when they put it into practice."-- Jayne Ptolemy , SHARP News "Mattes suggests that we can come to grips with what writing is by triangulating between inscription, the people inscribing, and the systems of communication in which their inscriptions circulated. The 16 essays in the collection bear out the expansive potentials of this framework, not only by truly taking on the contingency of writing itself but also by revealing how the same kinds of writing can do radically different cultural work."-- Sonja Drimmer , Public Books "This is an exciting collection. To see handwriting as a kind of media--and to understand that media form as intersectional--is a major and most welcome shift in how scholars understand the material texts of early America and is crucially important for the field moving forward."-- Megan Walsh , author of The Portrait and the Book: Illustration and Literary Culture in Early America "This new collection is a key intervention in literary studies. Its essays vary from the most canonical writers (Bradstreet, Poe, Emerson) to more obscure figures whose texts inform the ways scholars understand writing, textuality, and intermediality.


"-- Hilary E. Wyss , author of English Letters and Indian Literacies: Reading, Writing, and New England Missionary Schools, 1750-1830.


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