Tom Keeline, "The Apparatus Criticus in the Digital Age,"
Classical Journal 112.3 (2017) 342–363 (at 342):
It is a truth universally acknowledged that no one except textual critics and
pedants actually reads an apparatus criticus. Why should they? Consider
how few "general readers" read footnotes. Now picture those footnotes
festooned with cryptic symbols, cloaked in the obscurity of a learned language,
and provided without any superscript signaling in the main text that there might
be something relevant at the bottom of the page—then add in the pervasive
notion that the apparatus is merely a repository for what the editor thinks does
not belong in the text.
Id. (at 349-350, footnote omitted):
In my experience, undergraduates and graduate students rarely look at the
"crapparatus," as I once heard it disparagingly called, unless a commentary or a professor draws attention to a particular point.
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