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The colophon: History and analysisUnknown Date (has links)
"It is delightful to read for pleasure and information at the same time, but only rarely does the reader find material that satisfies him equally on both counts. Too often is presented 'more matter with less art' or form with too little substance. A happy combination conducive to both pleasure and instruction, however, may be found in The Colophon, A Book Collector's Quarterly. This magazine, which for thirteen years provided readers with entertaining articles concerning bibliography, book illustration, and fine printing, was able to survive the depression, yet was unable to be continued during the period when the nation was preparing for war. A detailed consideration of its history and an evaluation of its contents is the burden of the paper, a project which would seem appropriate in the training of a librarian in that the evaluation and selection of magazines is a part of almost every librarian's duties and is of as much importance as the selection of books"--Introduction. / "May, 1958." / Typescript. / "Submitted to the Graduate Council of Florida State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts." / Advisor: Agnes Gregory, Professor Directing Paper. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 87-89).
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Margins and marginality marginalia and colophons in south Slavic manuscripts during the Ottoman period, 1393-1878 /Nikolova-Houston, Tatiana Nikolaeva, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2008. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Margins and marginality : marginalia and colophons in south Slavic manuscripts during the Ottoman period, 1393-1878 /Nikolova-Houston, Tatiana Nikolaeva, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2008. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Margins and marginality: marginalia and colophons in south Slavic manuscripts during the Ottoman period, 1393-1878Nikolova-Houston, Tatiana Nikolaeva, 1961- 29 August 2008 (has links)
This study examined marginalia and colophons in South Slavic manuscripts to establish their value as primary historical source documents. The evidence of a "history from below" was compared with other primary sources to provide an understanding about the lives of Bulgarian Christian Slavs during the Ottoman period and a history of their language, scripts, and book production. The Ottoman Empire invaded Bulgaria in 1393, to remain in power there until 1878. During that time, scribes preserved Bulgarian literary heritage by copying manuscripts. They also recorded in the margins of the manuscripts their thoughts and perceptions, formal transactions of the church, and interactions between the church and its community. While the first marginalia were prayers for forgiveness, later marginalia became a somewhat hidden repository of the marginalized voices of the Ottoman Empire: clergy, readers, students, teachers, poets, and artists who repeatedly started with "Da se znae" (Let it be known). This study analyzed the 146 manuscripts in the Historical and Archival Church Institute in Sofia, Bulgaria (HACI) that contain marginalia and colophons. Content analysis of the corpus yielded 20 categories that clustered into six thematic groups: religious texts; marginalia related to book history and production; interactions between the readers and the book; interaction between the Church and the religious community; to historical events; the cosmos and natural history. This study employed a triangulation of methods, including traditional historical and the New History "grass-roots" methods, deconstruction, critical theory, codicology, diplomatics and linguistic analysis to understand the deeper meanings of marginalia and colophons. This inter-disciplinary study can be considered the first comprehensive, systematic study of South Slavic marginalia and colophons of any magnitude to be made available to Western scholars, and the first substantiated "history from below" of the Ottoman Empire. / text
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