Myrvold/Miniature Books, 3. Words in a Nutshell

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After Philemon Holland’s influential English translation of Pliny’s Natural History was first published in 1601, the Iliad-in-a-nutshell mentioned by Pliny became a commonplace motif of virtuosic compression in early modern England. Engaging with the popularity of this image, this chapter will explore its implications in early modern print culture. Although the frequently-appearing Iliad-in-a-nutshell might seem but a convenient rhetorical flourish, this chapter proposes that closer attention to it in the context of the small or miniature might help us to consider broader questions about the intertwining of physical and literary scale in early modern printed books as both texts and material objects. It argues that the miniature book, and more general desires to condense large works such as the Bible into smaller volumes, are not merely frivolous, but a manifestation of a wider anxiety about the relationship between physical size and literary weightiness.
- typeImage
- created on
- file formatjpg
- file size41 KB
- container titleMiniature Books: The Format and Function of Tiny Religious Texts
- creatorLucy Razzall
- isbn9781781798621 (eBook)
- publisherEquinox Publishing Ltd.
- publisher placeSheffield, United Kingdom
- rightsEquinox Publishing Ltd.
- series titleComparative Research on Iconic and Performative Texts
- doi
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