Periodic Reporting for period 2 - NOTA (Note-taking and Notebooks as Channels of Medieval Academic Dissemination across Europe)
Período documentado: 2022-07-01 hasta 2023-12-31
Although not primarily a project meant to have great societal influence, the NOTA project does have some importance for society. It is essential, in an age of change such as ours, to know the origins of the university as well as of our own study habits, and the NOTA project does indeed serve this purpose. Furthermore, in a time of information overload, such as ours, where organization of information is almost fully automatized, knowing how notes were taken and organized in the past can help one have a better grasp of how information is organized nowadays. Understanding how notes were taken in the past can also be an aid in improving one's own note-taking skills.
NOTA proposes to reunite as many notebooks of medieval students and see what they can tell us about note-taking and study practices. This helps tell the story of the medieval university from a unique perspective, offered by the work of those who study. These notebooks will be registered into the NOTA database, allowing for different visualizations. Alongside this quantitative work, NOTA also endeavors in qualitative work, each member of the team focusing on a notebook or collection of notebooks that tell the story of the medieval university that they stem from. This in depth study allows for the progress of knowledge in the field of medieval studies, since each of these case studies is rich in authors and texts that are only now being discovered. Their study is also a stepping stone in the reconstruction of the history of medieval universities.
In addition to definitions and methodology, the case studies analyzed in depth by the NOTA project go beyond the state of the art by providing new perspectives on manuscripts that stem from the university milieu. When they are understood and studied as notebooks and collections of notes, the context in which these manuscripts were produced also becomes clearer. From this perspective, one can attempt to explain why certain texts were jotted down, why others were abbreviated and what role tables of contents actually played in their structure.
The expected results for the project are three volumes published in the "Note-taking and Notebooks across Medieval Europe", at De Gruyter, which are dedicated to the most interesting of the NOTA case studies. Alongside these three volumes, the NOTA project will also publish digital editions from these notebooks, on the NOTA database, alongside the lists of notebooks, which will also be completed by the end of the project.