Jason König/Greg Woolf (eds.), Encyclopaedism from Antiquity to the Renaissance, Cambridge University Press 2013
Table of Contents |
There is a rich body of encyclopaedic writing which
survives from the two millennia before the Enlightenment. This book sheds new
light on that material. It traces the development of traditions of
knowledge-ordering which stretched back to Pliny and Varro and others in the
classical world. It works with a broad concept of encyclopaedism, resisting the
idea that there was any clear pre-modern genre of the encyclopaedia, and
showing instead how the rhetoric and techniques of comprehensive compilation
left their mark on a surprising range of texts. In the process it draws
attention to both remarkable similarities and striking differences between conventions
of encyclopaedic compilation in different periods. The focus is primarily on
European/Mediterranean culture. The book covers classical, medieval (including
Byzantine and Arabic) and Renaissance culture in turn, and combines chapters
which survey whole periods with others focused closely on individual texts as
case studies.
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