M-100v. Fragmentology - Advance Reading List
-
Reading/Watching List (* = required)
* Davis, Lisa Fagin. “The Beauvais Missal: Otto Ege’s Scattered Leaves and Digital Surrogacy,” Florilegium 33 (2016), 143–166.https://www.academia.edu/40254782/_The_Beauvais_Missal_Otto_Ege_s_Scattered_Leaves_and_Digital_Surrogacy_
Davis, Lisa Fagin. “Manuscript Road Trip” (blog), selected posts:
* “In Otto Ege’s Footsteps” (7 October 2013) https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2013/10/07/manuscript-road-trip-in-otto-eges-footsteps/
* “Otto Ege, St. Margaret, and Digital Fragmentology” (5 March 2014) https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2014/03/05/manuscript-road-trip-otto-ege-st-margaret-and-digital-fragmentology/
“An Otto Ege Treasure Trove in Maine” (3 June 2016) https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2016/06/03/manuscript-road-trip-an-otto-ege-treasure-trove-in-maine/
“Fragmentarium: a Model for Digital Fragmentology” (25 February 2018) https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2018/02/25/fragmentarium-a-model-for-digital-fragmentology/
* “Re-Introducing the Gottschalk Antiphonal!” (21 May 2018) https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2018/05/21/manuscript-road-trip-reintroducing-the-gottschalk-antiphonal/
“Fragmentology under Quarantine” (11 April 2020) https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2020/04/11/manuscript-road-trip-fragmentology-under-quarantine/
* “Otto Ege, St. Margaret, and Digital Fragmentology: Part 2” (7 June 2020) https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2020/06/07/manuscript-road-trip-otto-ege-st-margaret-and-digital-fragmentology-part-2/
* Davis, Lisa Fagin. “The Opportunities (and Limits) of Lockdown Digital Fragmentology,” Dark Archives 20/20, Keynote Address, 22 October 2020 (video)
* De Hamel, Christopher. “Cutting up Manuscripts for Pleasure and Profit,” The 1995 Sol. M. Malkin Lecture in Bibliography.Charlottesville, VA: Book Arts Press, 1996. https://www.dropbox.com/s/p4aq5ap9zzpcb8s/de%20Hamel%20Cutting%20up%20Manuscripts.pdf?dl=0
Duba, William and Christoph Flüeler. “Fragments and Fragmentology,” Fragmentology 1 (2018): 1–5 (DOI: 10.24446/a04a). https://dx.doi.org/10.24446/a04a
* Ege, Otto F. “I am a Biblioclast,” Avocations (March 1938): 516–520. https://www.dropbox.com/s/ase6wy5yd7c79js/Ege%20Biblioclast.pdf?dl=0
* Eze, Anne-Marie. “77. Montage of cuttings from a missal of Clement VII Jacopo del Giallo (illuminator)” in Jeffrey Hamburger et al., eds., Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston Collections (Chestnut Hill, MA: McMullen Museum of Art, 2016), 100–101. https://iiif-orpheus.s3.amazonaws.com/61d56b20d5fafd866178dd98-BW-76-77c.pdf
* “A Fractured Inheritance: The Problems, Challenges, and Opportunities of Collecting Manuscript Fragments,” RBS Online, 15 September 2020 (video)
Gwara, Scott. “Collections, Compilations, and Convolutes of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscript Fragments in North America before ca. 1900,” Fragmentology 3 (2020): 73–139, (DOI: 10.24446/dlll) https://dx.doi.org/10.24446/dlll
* Mullett, Ruth. “In situ Manuscript Fragments in the Incunables of the Bodleian Library, Oxford: A Fragmentarium Case Study,” Fragmentology 1 (2018): 111–20 (DOI: 10.24446/6q36) https://dx.doi.org/10.24446/6q36