Will your class coursepacket look like this? |
As we start our first weeks together, and for some of you,
your first week of college life, I want to turn to medieval
gloss to entice you to implement some of the traditions of the Middle Ages into
your study habits. First, it goes without saying that you’re a student at a
university—in Latin, universitas,
meaning corporation. By entering into Drury, you’re following a nearly thousand-year old tradition that began in the Middle Ages, and represents a community of
shared learning. Drury’s Latin motto is Christo
et Humanitati, urging the study of the humanities as a link to the
Christian world, something that was set as an ideal in the twelfth century [by
1500, around 80 universities existed in European cities from London to
Rome]. Books were expensive and sparse, but lectures were held,
libraries existed, and faculty read from books, which students copied. Part of
student life, and even private life, was the medieval gloss, a commentary on the book itself, within
the book.
Reading was not just reading in the Middle Ages, nor should
it be today. 2014 reading: head-phones, computer on, phone on, texts coming in,
what are books? 1255 reading: a concentrated study of the written word as an
intimate way to connect with the sacred text, and a written commentary next to
the words, full of quotations, ideas, questions, and sometimes fun marginalia [lots
of “ass trumpets,” see below]. My basic
point is that in the Middle Ages, writing around the text was common practice,
as it used up the empty space of parchment that was expensive, but more
importantly furthered the learning community. This was known as a gloss. The
act of interpreting the text is known as an exegesis.
Each medieval reader might add new and different commentary.
The space was a center for further learning.
They might quote an additional scholarly quote, ask a question, or at times
express dissent. Your Drury faculty do not expect you to become a monk or nun
and work in a scriptorium, laboring over the copying of text; we do expect you
to read and interact with your reading in a way that you may never have done
previously. Make a point to try to mark
in your text, using some of the same traditions, for every class. Perhaps it is
a hand-arrow like below to emphasize an important point; or perhaps an extended
commentary on what you are reading with questions. A critique would be OK too [I do a lot of this when reading textbooks!]. Medieval scholars have much to
teach us about applied reading as a method of active engagement. The posted
images [only one is necessary for class] link to the idea of continual
scholarship, making notations as a form of active engagement, and fun too.
Does this express dissent or just harmless fun? |
Attention! Important! |
Further reading: even though a website for a business, it’s
scholarly, with author listed, and noted on several sites: http://scripturestudysoftware.com/2012/06/29/the-technology-of-scripture-study-the-middle-ages/
This one is an academic site for as it mentions a
thesis being written: http://www.huygens.knaw.nl/marginal-scholarship-vidi/