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11 - Excursus: Westcott and Hort

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 August 2009

Charlotte Brewer
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

At this point, it will be helpful to step back and consider some more general issues on the editing of Piers Plowman. The authorship debate was partly fuelled by the perception of differences between A and B. For a number of reasons, there is strong psychological resistance to the possibility of variation in a canonical text. In the years following Manly's bombshell, advocates of single authorship felt the need to argue that the differences Manly perceived between A and B did not exist (as in the cases of dialectal or alliterative distinctions), or that they were not significant, or that they were due to faulty scribal copying preserved in Skeat's edition. Manly and his followers explained the differences by positing more than one author, and suggesting scribal disruption of A, thus assigning to other hands all the major flaws which were perceived to exist in the canonical text.

There also exists an accompanying resistance to the notion that the author may have changed his mind. He would presumably have done so for some reason, the most obvious being that he regarded his first version as unsatisfactory. But to admit this necessitates admitting also that not all of the author's writings were of the same high quality – an admission which many critics seem to find intolerable, when an alternative explanation is at hand, viz. attributing the variation to scribal corruption.

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Chapter
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Editing Piers Plowman
The Evolution of the Text
, pp. 209 - 216
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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