New philology (medieval studies)

New philology is, in medieval studies, an intellectual movement which seeks to move beyond the text-critical method associated with Karl Lachmann, which sought to gather manuscripts of a given text and use them to reconstruct a version of that text as close as possible to the earliest written version (or "archetype"). In contrast, New Philology seeks to edit and study texts in the form in which they are attested. Some of the key Anglophone proponents of the movement have also referred to it as New Medievalism.[1][2]

  1. ^ The New Medievalism, ed. by Kevin Brownlee, Marina S. Brownlee, and Stephen G. Nichols (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991), ISBN 9780801841712.
  2. ^ Rethinking the New Medievalism, ed. by ed. by Alison Calhoun, Jacqueline Cerquiglini-Toulet, Jeanette Patterson, Joachim Küpper, R. Howard Bloch (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014), ISBN 9781421412429.