09 December 2017
Correction: a missing footnote
In my article “Difference, Disability, and Composition in the Late Middle Ages: Of Antonio ‘Zachara’ da Teramo and Francesco ‘Il Cieco’ da Firenze,” chapter 26 in Oxford [University Press] Handbook of Music & Disability Studies, edited by Blake Howe, Stephanie Jensen-Moulton, Neil Lerner, and Joseph Straus, pp. 517–28, there is a discussion of Petrus frater dictus Palma ociosa, and how his "deformed hand" (Palma ociosa) may have impacted his perception as a singer and a teacher in light of the importance of the (Guidonian) Hand in instructing singing. In the context of a paragraph of original research, cited articles, and common knowledge not requiring a footnote, this discussion is none of the above. I should have cited Christopher Page, The 'Summa musice': a Thirteenth-Century Manual for Singers (Cambridge: CUP, 1991), which as Daniel Leech-Wilkinson's Grove article notes, is the place where this theory is discussed (pp. 72, 158, and lines 692-96). I regret the omission and ask Page's forgiveness for the oversight.
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