Description

Book Synopsis
This wide-ranging and entertaining book explores blank space from incunabula to Google books. Blanks are a paradox--simultaneously nothing and something, gesturing to what was once there or might be there. They are also a creative opportunity for readers as well as writers: readers respond to what is not there and writers come to anticipate that response. Thus, blank space develops literary and ludic applications. Each chapter focuses on one typographical form of what is not there on the page: physical gaps (Chapter One), marks of incompletion such as &c (Chapter Two), and the asterisk as a stand-in for things that cannot be said (Chapter Three). By looking at the early-modern page as a visual unit as well as a verbal unit, this volume shows how the relationship between textual layout and textual content is as productive for writers as it is for readers. Mise-en-page influences readers in the same way that rhetoric influences readers. It is thus possible to speak of ''the rhetoric of the page''.

Table of Contents
Introduction 1: 'This page intentionally left blank'; or, the apophatic page 2: Et cetera / etcetera / &c; or, the aposiopetic page 3: The asterisk; or, the gnomic page Epilogue Works Cited

The Rhetoric of the Page

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    A Hardback by Laurie Maguire

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      View other formats and editions of The Rhetoric of the Page by Laurie Maguire

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 05/11/2020
      ISBN13: 9780198862109, 978-0198862109
      ISBN10: 0198862105

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This wide-ranging and entertaining book explores blank space from incunabula to Google books. Blanks are a paradox--simultaneously nothing and something, gesturing to what was once there or might be there. They are also a creative opportunity for readers as well as writers: readers respond to what is not there and writers come to anticipate that response. Thus, blank space develops literary and ludic applications. Each chapter focuses on one typographical form of what is not there on the page: physical gaps (Chapter One), marks of incompletion such as &c (Chapter Two), and the asterisk as a stand-in for things that cannot be said (Chapter Three). By looking at the early-modern page as a visual unit as well as a verbal unit, this volume shows how the relationship between textual layout and textual content is as productive for writers as it is for readers. Mise-en-page influences readers in the same way that rhetoric influences readers. It is thus possible to speak of ''the rhetoric of the page''.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction 1: 'This page intentionally left blank'; or, the apophatic page 2: Et cetera / etcetera / &c; or, the aposiopetic page 3: The asterisk; or, the gnomic page Epilogue Works Cited

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