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Chapter 9 - ALFREDIAN TECHNOLOGY: BOOKS AND ÆDIFICIA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2009

David Pratt
Affiliation:
Downing College, Cambridge
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Summary

Alfredian theatre privileged reading, essential to the delivery of vernacular prose. Translation offered the imagined reading of a Latin text; its re-enactment was no less dependent on reading and recitation. Much of the novelty of Alfredian theatre lay in its exploitation of literacy as a form of mental technology, extending beyond direct interaction to include more open-ended priorities of wisdom and self-restraint. Such mental effects were in turn dependent on material innovation, geared to the demands of the royal written word. Book production was inescapable, yet innovation extended further, to artefactual production. Alfredian books were matched by a series of novel objects, also implicated in the literate acquisition of wisdom. As a centre of production as well as performance, the royal household was enhanced by the unity of investigative enterprise. The outcome was a co-ordinated system of technology, oriented towards the king's mental goals. The court itself supplied all necessary mechanisms of projection, enhancing the reins of its central control.

BOOKS AND BOOK PRODUCTION

Textual duplication was essential for wider performance. ‘Re-education’ witnessed the copying of manuscripts on a considerable scale. Multiple copies of the Hierdeboc were required for episcopal recipients; comparable processes lay behind the ‘common stock’ of the Chronicle and the law-book. Dissemination of other royal texts is supported by context, prefatory material and transmission-history. Precise mechanisms are clouded by uneven evidence.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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