All’s I-L-L That Starts “I’le”: Acrostic Space and Ludic Reading in the Margins of the Early Modern Play-Text

Q3 Arts and Humanities Renaissance Drama Pub Date : 2020-09-01 DOI:10.1086/712102
Andrew Sofer
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Abstract

aissance Drama, volum 6-3739/2020/4802-00 ew experiences are intellectuallymore exhilarating, if alsomore perilous than the apparent discovery of pattern where none was hitherto believed to exist,” writes Maren-Sofie Röstvig. “If pattern is what we want, pattern is what we are bound to find.” What then are we to make of acrostic patterns that emerge, willy-nilly, from the margins of Shakespeare’s (and others’) printed works? Are these patterns to be ascribed to the author(s), and if not, then to whom? Are they false creations, proceeding from the heat-oppressed brains of Baconian crackpots and recreational logologists, or are they ciphers awaiting decryption by the occasional scholar-sleuth? Who “speaks” the marginal acrostic—author, character, text, or reader? Might there be such a thing as an unconscious acrostic, unintended by the playwright but in some sense “really” there? Might an acrostic subliminally affect a reader who does not see it? In this essay, I do not propose definitive answers to these questions. Instead, bracketing authorial intention, I wish to highlight the readerly operation that makes such patterns visible in the first place. I map a phenomenology of ludic reading whose typographical ground is material, yet whose ontology is ultimately indeterminable. This ludic zone allows for authorial intention without being
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“I’le”开头的所有I—L—L:早期现代戏剧文本边缘的杂技空间与鲁德阅读
《文艺复兴戏剧》,第6-3739/2020/4802-00卷,新的体验在智力上更令人兴奋,如果也比迄今为止没有人认为存在的模式的明显发现更危险,”马伦-苏菲写道Röstvig。“如果模式是我们想要的,那么模式就是我们一定会找到的。”那么,我们该如何理解莎士比亚(和其他人)印刷作品空白处随意出现的离合图案呢?这些模式是否属于作者,如果不是,那么是谁?它们是来自培根式的疯子和休闲的逻辑学家的热压迫下的大脑的虚假创造,还是它们是等待偶尔的学者侦探解密的密码?谁在“说话”边缘的离诗——作者、人物、文本还是读者?有没有一种无意识的离合诗,是剧作家无意创作的,但在某种意义上“真的”存在?一首离合诗是否会潜意识地影响到没有看到它的读者?在本文中,我不会对这些问题给出明确的答案。相反,除了作者的意图外,我希望强调首先使这种模式可见的读者操作。我描绘了一种嬉笑阅读的现象学,它的排版基础是材料,但它的本体论最终是不确定的。这个滑稽的区域允许作者的意图,而不是
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来源期刊
Renaissance Drama
Renaissance Drama Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
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