Abstract
This article explores how ancient rhetorical theories about the
improvement of human memory were applied to manuscripts in the form of
paratextual ordering systems. It then considers the intellectual
implications of these technological changes in the management of textual
knowledge. A sequentially ordered system for dividing textual
information into “chapters” or “verses” proved powerful for both
mnemonic arts and textual arts. The article next explores a specific
example of paratextual technologies in Priscillian of Avila’s
fourth-century CE Canones Epistularum Pauli Apostoli,
which is one of the most sophisticated cross-referencing systems ever
produced prior to printed texts. The article concludes by reflecting on
the implications of textual divisions and citation schemes for the work
of theology. The test case for this is Priscillian’s “versification” of
the Pauline corpus for purposes of textual abstraction (the extraction and reorganization of numerically divided textual parts) in service of theological abstraction (the attempt to create systematic wholes out of the newly reorganized parts).
Original language | English |
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Article number | 426 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Religions |
Volume | 13 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 8 May 2022 |
Keywords
- Memory
- Rhetoric
- Manuscript technologies
- Paratexts
- Priscillian of Avila
- Pauline theology
- Theology