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Language Arts & Disciplines Historical & Comparative

Critical Issues Editing Exploration Text

edited by Germaine Warkentin

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Dec 1995
Category
Historical & Comparative, Expeditions & Discoveries, Essays & Travelogues
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780802006943
    Publish Date
    Sep 1995
    List Price
    $57.00
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442656154
    Publish Date
    Dec 1995
    List Price
    $25.95

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Description

The papers in this collection deal with a cultural problem central to the study of the history of exploration: the editing and transmission of the texts in which explorers relate their experiences. The papers chart the transformation of the study of exploration writing from the genres of national epic and scientific reportage to the genre of cultural analysis. As well, they reflect ongoing changes in our ideas about editorial procedures, literary genres, and cultural appropriation.

 

This volume begins with a paper by David Henige, who confronts the classic editorial problems associated with the writings of Christopher Columbus. Luciano Formisano, studying Amerigo Vespucci, illustrates the technical problems associated with transmission. David and Alison Quinn examine Richard Hakluyt’s Discourse on Western Planting (1584). I.S. MacLaren investigates the publication, in the nineteenth century, of field notes by Canadian artist Paul Kane. Helen Wallis’s paper looks at the institutionalization of ‘exploration writing’ in the activities of the great publication societies. Finally, in a paper that throws into question assumptions about textuality that would have seemed unassailable three decades ago, James Lockhart examines the textual editing of Nahuatl versions of the conquest of Meso-America.

 

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About the author

Germaine Warkentin is a professor emerita of the Department of English at Victoria College, University of Toronto.

Germaine Warkentin's profile page