Now it’s time for our #teachingcodex round table feat @HLaehnemann @olde_bookes @MatthewHolford, Andrew Honey, and chaired by our co-founder Tristan Franklinos
First up @olde_bookes is showcasing Trinity College MS 29 #teachingcodex, a universal history of the world in Middle English and Latin, compiled in C15
@olde_bookes #teachingcodex Hybridity is relevant in that it's compiled from MS and print sources. Transition from MS to print culture is not one-directional.
@olde_bookes #teachingcodex there's no distinction between how the print vs MS sources are used
@olde_bookes #teachingcodex there's also material hybridity: it's a paper manuscript but features a parchment image pasted in; we have linguistic hybridity; we have hybridity of genre and form (eg a section from Confessio Amantis inserted into the chronicle).
@olde_bookes #teachingcodex This hybridity isn't unusual; we see it often in miscellanies – but this isn't a traditional miscellany. Ideals of hybridity relate to ideas of consistency, wholeness.
@olde_bookes #teachingcodex Helps students think outside the categories they're taught: modern/medieval, print/manuscript etc
@olde_bookes #teachingcodex It appeals to students to compare hybridity in modern age (e.g. print vs digital) but also how hybridity used in this particular manuscript. Does it become something different from its source texts because of its hybrid nature?
@olde_bookes #teachingcodex Students work with modern editions rather than physical MSS. These might smooth over OR bring to fore hybridity. Encourage students to see how it's constituted.
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Finally we're hearing from @HLaehnemann, Professor of Medieval German, who says her first paper after arriving in Oxford was at the first #teachingcodex colloquium – and it was on the meeting of material and digital, so we've come full circle
Started me reaching out beyond Oxford, having students reflect digitally. Covid cohort in particular! #teachingcodex
That was borne out of pandemic necessity, but it started us making the Oxford holdings available to a much wider audience. We could invite experts from all around world! #teachingcodex
Now we're hearing from Andrew Honey, book conservator at the @bodleianlibs #teachingcodex
You don't need to be able to *read* the text in order to understand books as objects #teachingcodex
What do we mean by hybridity? The idea of 'mixed character' seems of most interest. The composite nature of the items studied and complexity that brings out? How to get students to think beyond presenting something *as a text* #teachingcodex
Our final #teachingcodex presentation for this panel is from Laure Miolo on 'Teaching with manuscripts and instruments'. She's brought an astrolabe with her!
Laure is a historian of late medieval Europe, specialising in manuscript studies and history of early libraries with a special focus on scientific books #teachingcodex
Those who specialise in medieval instruments tend to come from scientific background; those who work on MSS tend to be trained in history. Corresponding differences in teaching #teachingcodex
Our next presentation is from our own @DowsMillerSeb and it's called 'Don't mention the punctuation! Introducing materiality to text-based teaching contexts'. Seb works primarily on Old French. #teachingcodex
#teachingcodex Hybridity today: approaches to teaching texts which are found in MSS and printed editions
We need to think about how we're teaching texts. Teaching context isn't set up with awareness of materiality. It's OUR fault when students think that punctuation should be commented on in medieval texts #teachingcodex