@inbook{e5f6c636590c43abb1a92d3ac5348761,
title = "Conclusion: Romeo + Juliet",
abstract = "The four books that form the focus of this study all demonstrate the extent to which culturally elite ideas about romantic love were spreading to a broader reading public throughout the sixteenth century. Conduct books, philosophical treatises, letter-writing manuals, and medical texts were all appearing in the vernacular, and their specialized knowledge was being made even more accessible through editorial apparatus such as indices, detailed tables of contents, and printed marginal annotations.",
keywords = "Early Modern Period, Marginal Annotation, Medical Text, Romantic Love, Sixteenth Century",
author = "Moulton, {Ian Frederick}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2014, Ian Frederick Moulton.",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1057/9781137405050_6",
language = "English (US)",
series = "Early Modern Cultural Studies 1500-1700",
publisher = "Springer Science and Business Media B.V.",
pages = "183--186",
booktitle = "Early Modern Cultural Studies 1500-1700",
}