I took a course, in the course of my Master's in English, on bibliography and textual criticism. The latter didn't mean literary criticism, but identifying changes (emendations) made in the transmission of a text, and especially errors. They creep in everywhere; from the manuscript (what is that word?) to the proofs to the final publication to changes made by the author in subsequent editions (Leave of Grass grew and changed enormously over Whitman's life. It was the only book he published, but he revised and added to it constantly until his death.) Or changes in pirated editions, or changes by editors who don't like some words used somewhere, or simply error (again) in the transmission of the text into a new edition. It's rather like a very complicated game of "Telephone": mistakes and changes and elisions happen constantly.The Tripitaka Koreana - carved on 81258 woodblocks in the 13th century - is the most successful large data transfer over time yet achieved by humankind. 52 million characters of information, transmitted over nearly 8 centuries with zero data loss - an unequalled achievement. 1/ pic.twitter.com/TaNkmlldhA
— Incunabula (@incunabula) September 26, 2022
(Well, almost definitive; we're back already to that everything is a matter of conversation.) The Gospel of Mark alone has a short ending, a longer ending, and "Secret Mark," which was intentionally kept away from...the monks, I guess, since almost no one in the churches was literate at the time....and mentioned only in the works of the early church fathers (I forget which one right now, and I'm too lazy to get up and look). The whole issue of "literalism" that appeared in early 20th century American Christianity (itself really a reaction to German Biblical scholarship in the 19th century) rests on ignoring this issue of which text is "literally" the one to take. well...literally.Because of the supreme accuracy of the Tripiášaka Koreana, the Japanese, Chinese, and Taiwanese versions of the Tripiášaka are ALL based on this Korean version. 16/
— Incunabula (@incunabula) September 27, 2022
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