The Academic Lecture. A Genre In Between
Abstract
This article provides some observations on the production and
function of academic lecture notes in the early modern period
at the universities of Uppsala and Lund int the 17th century.
Books being relatively scarce, students aquired most of their
knowledge by listening to lectures or by reading notes taken
during the lectures. Compared to dissertations, i.e. the printed
texts defended in a disputation, the lecture notes were usually
better accounts of knowledge, but their contents may deviate
substantially from what the lecturer originally said due to the
modifications and distortions caused by those who took the
notes or those who copied the them. Further, the mode of lecturing
– dictation versus a freer extemporizing delivery – affected
the form of the manuscripts as well. A pair of manuscripts
from the teaching of Samuel Pufendorf in the early 1670s are
here used to illustrate the difficulty to determine
the authenticity
of extant manuscripts and how they originated.
Publisher
LIR. journal
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2011Author
Lindberg, Bo
Keywords
lecture manuscripts
dissertations
dictation
Pufendorf
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
Language
eng