George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription

George MacDonald's last major work of fiction, Lilith, was published in 1895, but the first version of the romance was written in March of 1890. Lilith is an account of the unintentional journey of the protagonist into another world populated by both mythological figures drawn from the Judeo-C...

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Main Author: Griffith, David LaMond
Other Authors: English
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31892
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04252001-104904/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-318922020-10-24T05:32:41Z George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription Griffith, David LaMond English Colaianne, Anthony J. Hatfield, Leonard L. Graham, Peter W. manuscript textual editing Victorian Literature Scottish Literature George MacDonald's last major work of fiction, Lilith, was published in 1895, but the first version of the romance was written in March of 1890. Lilith is an account of the unintentional journey of the protagonist into another world populated by both mythological figures drawn from the Judeo-Christian tradition and by horrific personifications of the psychological horrors of the protagonist's own mind. The story of Lilith describes the protagonist's experiences in this other world which bring him to the point of repentance. <P> The manuscript of the first version, known now as Lilith A, is housed in the British Library along with seven other typed revisions and printer's proofs. Taken together, the A-H manuscripts of Lilith represent the complete production history textual evolution of what is arguably MacDonald's greatest literary work. The body of this paper contains the 161 page transcription of Lilith A produced from the original manuscript and a microfilm photographic reproduction provided by the British Library. <P> The introduction of this paper outlines the history of Lilith A, describes it's similarities and differences with the published version, provides a bibliographic description of the manuscript, and outlines the editorial principles used in producing the transcript of the text. The introduction is followed by a transcription of the title page created for the manuscripts of Lilith by Winifred Louisa, Lady Troup, who was MacDonald's daughter and amanuensis. This title page is followed by the transcription of Lilith A. Master of Arts 2014-03-14T20:34:13Z 2014-03-14T20:34:13Z 2001-04-13 2001-04-25 2002-04-25 2001-04-25 Thesis etd-04252001-104904 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31892 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04252001-104904/ etd.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic manuscript
textual editing
Victorian Literature
Scottish Literature
spellingShingle manuscript
textual editing
Victorian Literature
Scottish Literature
Griffith, David LaMond
George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription
description George MacDonald's last major work of fiction, Lilith, was published in 1895, but the first version of the romance was written in March of 1890. Lilith is an account of the unintentional journey of the protagonist into another world populated by both mythological figures drawn from the Judeo-Christian tradition and by horrific personifications of the psychological horrors of the protagonist's own mind. The story of Lilith describes the protagonist's experiences in this other world which bring him to the point of repentance. <P> The manuscript of the first version, known now as Lilith A, is housed in the British Library along with seven other typed revisions and printer's proofs. Taken together, the A-H manuscripts of Lilith represent the complete production history textual evolution of what is arguably MacDonald's greatest literary work. The body of this paper contains the 161 page transcription of Lilith A produced from the original manuscript and a microfilm photographic reproduction provided by the British Library. <P> The introduction of this paper outlines the history of Lilith A, describes it's similarities and differences with the published version, provides a bibliographic description of the manuscript, and outlines the editorial principles used in producing the transcript of the text. The introduction is followed by a transcription of the title page created for the manuscripts of Lilith by Winifred Louisa, Lady Troup, who was MacDonald's daughter and amanuensis. This title page is followed by the transcription of Lilith A. === Master of Arts
author2 English
author_facet English
Griffith, David LaMond
author Griffith, David LaMond
author_sort Griffith, David LaMond
title George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription
title_short George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription
title_full George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription
title_fullStr George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription
title_full_unstemmed George MacDonald's Lilith A: A Transcription
title_sort george macdonald's lilith a: a transcription
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31892
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04252001-104904/
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