- Home
- The Medieval Globe Books
- literary criticism
- history
- Practices of Commentary
Practices of Commentary
Medieval Traditions and Transmissions
Edited by Amanda Goodman and Suzanne Conklin Akbari
General editor Carol Symes
Series: The Medieval Globe Books
212 Pages, Trim size: 6 x 9 in
- Hardcover
- 9781802700350
- Published: August 2023
The comparative or connected study of localized intellectual traditions poses special challenges to the global turn in medieval studies. How can we enable conversations across language groups and intricate cultural formations, as well as disciplines? Practices of commentary offer a compelling opportunity: their visual layouts reveal assumptions about the relative status of text and gloss, while interpretive interlinear or marginal prompts capture the dynamic relationships among generations of teachers, students, and readers. The material traces of manuscript usage—from hastily scrawled marginal notes to vivid rubrication—illuminate the shared didactic and communicative practices developed within scholarly communities. By bringing together researchers working on specific cultures and discourses across Eurasia, this volume moves toward a global account of premodern commentary traditions.
"Introduction: Commentary at the Crossroads," by Suzanne Conklin Akbari and Amanda Goodman
"Graeco-Roman Commentary beyond Alexandria: Problems and Prospects," by Lorenza Bennardo and Kenneth W. Yu
"From Plane to Space: The Narrative Arc of a Byzantine Mathematical Manual," by Roland Betancourt
"Periodization in the Sunni Qur’an Commentary Tradition: A Chronological History of a Genre," by Walid Saleh
"On the Practice of Autocommentary in Sanskrit Sources," by Isabelle Ratié
"Oral Commentaries and Scholarly Debates in Sanskrit Philosophy," by Elisa Freschi, Jonathan Peterson, and Ajay Rao
"On the Nature of Chinese Buddhist Scriptural Exegesis: Observations on the Commentaries of Chengguan, Woncheuk, and Other Sui-Tang Exegetes," by Fedde M. de Vries
"The Mise-en-Page of a Sino-Tibetan Dunhuang Manuscript: Yuanhui’s Commentary on the Laṅkāvatārasūtra," by Meghan Howard Masang and Amanda K. Goodman
"Commentary and Multilingualism in the Ottoman Reception of Texts: Three Perspectives," by Aslıhan Gürbüzel, Sooyong Kim, and Jeannie Miller
Index
Amanda Goodman is an assistant professor in the departments for the Study of Religion and East Asian Studies, University of Toronto. Her research focuses on the transmission and spread of Buddhist tantra in the "borderland" regions between China and Tibet during the eighth to twelfth centuries.
Suzanne Conklin Akbari is Professor of Medieval Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. Her research has traced the relationship between sight and knowledge in poetic texts, challenged the notion of medieval European literature’s insularity, and highlighted the influence of Arabic culture.
Carol Symes is the Lynn M. Martin Professorial Scholar at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her research focuses on the history of documentary practices and communication media in medieval Europe.