Media Literate Catholics: Seeing, Reading and Writing in Early Modern Participatory Culture

Authors

  • Feike Dietz Utrecht University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v2i2.791

Keywords:

authorship, remix, media literacy, Early Modern period, Catholic print culture, emblem books, produsers

Abstract

In this article I use the concept of ‘media literacy’ – generally discussed in the context of new media – to analyse media ability and conversance in seventeenth century Catholic culture. In particular, I focus on an untitled and anonymous Dutch composite volume which combines handwritten texts, printed texts and images. By reconstructing the relationship between the manuscript and its printed sources, I argue that the composite volume was the result of a meditative reading and writing process in which fragments from the popular religious emblem book Pia Desideria (1624) and other contiguous printed books were combined in a new multimedial product, which may serve as a means to share (media) skills and knowledge, and to facilitate the meditation processes of future consumers. I demonstrate that literacies now associated with new media – such as the ability to actively participate in media practices, and to consult hypertexts – were vital to early modern Catholics who constructed their identity by using and producing media.

Author Biography

Feike Dietz, Utrecht University

Feike Dietz is Assistant Professor in Early Modern Dutch Literature and Culture at Utrecht University. Her recent PhD-project focused on the interconfessional exchange of illustrated religious literature in the Dutch Republic. She has published on this topic in several articles, and her book Literaire levensaders: Internationale uitwisseling van woord, beeld en religie in de Republiek (Literary Lifelines: The international exchange of Word, Image and Religion in the Dutch Republic, Verloren 2012).

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Published

2013-09-20

How to Cite

Dietz, F. (2013). Media Literate Catholics: Seeing, Reading and Writing in Early Modern Participatory Culture. uthorship, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v2i2.791

Issue

Section

Special Topic: Remix