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The Footnote: A Curious History by Anthony Grafton
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The Footnote: A Curious History

by Anthony Grafton

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201128,012 (3.33)2
Recently added bykerlin, private library, epinoso, LBrary, kchgator, filletk, stephenjchow, menglidong, colls2009
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I have to say it is fairly impressive (and surprising) that this book is owned by 103 people on LibraryThing.(1) I would have guessed more like 10.

1. http://www.librarything.com/work-info...
  wfzimmerman | Jul 2, 2007 |
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In the eighteenth century, the historical footnote was a high form of literary art.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Original publication date1997
First wordsIn the eighteenth century, the historical footnote was a high form of literary art.
Last words(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
BlurbersFrancis Spufford
Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0674307607, Paperback)

The struggle over what history is and how it should be told affects even such a constant convention as the footnote. As Anthony Grafton tells us in his entertaining study The Footnote, this tool of scholarship is just that: a tool that marks the professional from the amateur. "Like the high whine of the dentist's drill," he says, "the low rumble of the footnote on the historian's page reassures: the tedium it inflicts, like the pain inflicted by the drill, is not random but directed, part of the cost that the benefits of modern science and technology exact." There are some scholars, Grafton avers, who consider the footnote an anachronism meant to distance people from their pasts. Conversely, there are some who wage whole wars against other scholars through the medium of their notes. In any event, Grafton opines, the footnote will prevail, protecting works of scholarship from assault as surely as armor protects a tank.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:11 -0400)

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