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CitizenWald , to bookhistodons
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

VIRTUAL TALK | Oysyes off the Page: The Center's Collection, with Caleb Sher | Thursday, June 20 @ 7 p.m. ET - Yiddish Book Center

https://support.yiddishbookcenter.org/site/Ticketing/1317906751?view=confirm&id=10842&tranid=316754&interaction_id=10682711

@bookhistodons @bookstodon

CitizenWald , to bookhistodons
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

laudatory review of Jeff Jarvis. The Gutenberg Parenthesis: The Age of and Its Lessons for the Age of the by Pritha Mukherjee in – SHARP NEWS @sharporg

https://sharpweb.org/sharpnews/2024/05/31/jeff-jarvis-the-gutenberg-parenthesis-the-age-of-print-and-its-lessons-for-the-age-of-the-internet/

@bookhistodons @bookstodon

CitizenWald , to bookhistodons
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

The Touch of Art: Book Cover Designs of Sarah Wyman Whitman

https://blogs.loc.gov/preservation/2024/05/sarah-wyman-whitman/?loclr=eapres

Calling overdue attention to women in and
Sarah Wyman Whitman (1842-1904) was one of the first American artists to make a career of book cover design. From 1880 to 1904 she designed around 300 book covers, mostly for Houghton, Mifflin and Company. Her covers sold books so well that the publisher mentioned her name as the cover designer in its advertisements.

@bookstodon @bookhistodons

SJLahey , to litstudies
@SJLahey@mastodon.social avatar

in 31 May 1669: Citing poor eyesight, Samuel Pepys (1633 Feb 23–1703 May 26) makes his final diary entry.
@bookhistodons @histodons @litstudies

CitizenWald , to bookhistodons
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

Thursday, May 30, 2024, 2 - 3pm US Eastern

Bookstores, Collectors, and the Rare Book Trade in Historical Perspective | American Antiquarian Society

https://www.americanantiquarian.org/node/8568

@bookstodon @bookhistodons

SJLahey , to bookhistodons
@SJLahey@mastodon.social avatar

27 May 2019: Leslie Weir was appointed Librarian & Archivist of Canada; she is the first woman to hold this role.

@bookhistodons @histodons

SJLahey , to bookhistodons
@SJLahey@mastodon.social avatar

14 May 1761: The Halifax Gazette () ran the 1st advertisement of bookseller James Rivington (1724–1802) of London, UK, who had opened ’s 1st retail bookshop in Halifax “next Door to Mr. Manning nigh the [Grand] Parade”.
@bookhistodons @histodons

scotlit , to litstudies
@scotlit@mastodon.scot avatar

The Scottish Novel in 1824
1 July, University of Edinburgh – free

This one-day in-person symposium marks the bicentenary of 1824, an ‘annus mirabilis’ in the history of Scottish fiction that saw the publication of two experimental masterpieces: James Hogg’s The Private Memoirs & Confessions of a Justified Sinner, & Walter Scott’s Redgauntlet.

@litstudies

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-scottish-novel-in-1824-tickets-873941782397

SJLahey , to bookhistodons
@SJLahey@mastodon.social avatar

Some : French lawyer & author Marc Lescarbot (d.1641) (‘ML’) had a client involved in an expedition to Acadia, New France. He invited ML, who accepted. 1606 July: They reached Port Royal (now in )… with ML’s in tow: the 1st known library* in what is now .

  • Depending on your definition of ‘library’, of course. Let’s say, ‘Lescarbot’s books are regarded as the first known collection of European-style codices in what is now Canada’.
    @bookhistodons
CitizenWald , to bookhistodons
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

beautiful bit of book history:

florid poem by Col. J. J. von Scheler in honor of the 54th birthday [when you're an enlightened despit, it doesn't have to be a round number] of Duke Carl Eugen of Württemberg
Small folio from the presses of Court Printer Christoph Friedrich Cotta the elder, Stuttgart


@bookhistodons

CitizenWald OP ,
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

Among the beauties of traditional printing, as book historians know, are the distinctive character and robust materiality.
Note here, the tactile quality of the rag paper (photo 1), the deep impression of type and ornament (2) and the way the border is assembled from individual ornamental pieces (3)

@dbellingradt may appreciate this


@bookhistodons

impression of title letters and title page ornament showing through on second page
small barely perceptible breaks in the ornamental border show how it was assembled from individual pieces of type

SJLahey , to medievodons
@SJLahey@mastodon.social avatar

in 6 May 1236: Death of Roger of Wendover, Benedictine monk & 1st of a series of important chroniclers at St Albans. His best-known chronicle, Flores historiarum, survives in 2 —including the 1 shown in the 📷—& an edition in Matthew Paris’ (c.1200–1259) Chronica majora.
@bookhistodons @medievodons

SJLahey , to bookhistodons
@SJLahey@mastodon.social avatar

in : Happy birthday to the French publisher Louis Christophe François Hachette (1800 May 05–1864 Jul 31), founder of @HachetteLivre (estab. 1826). Initially called Brédif, the company became L. Hachette et Compagnie on 01 Jan 1846.

@bookhistodons

SJLahey , to bookhistodons
@SJLahey@mastodon.social avatar

in : Death of Eleanor Sleath (1770 Oct 15–1847 May 05), best known for her 1798 novel The Orphan of the Rhine, listed as one of the 7 ‘horrid novels’ recommended by Isabella Thorpe in Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey.
(‘The Northanger Horrid Novels’ were believed to be of Austen’s own invention until Montague Summers began publishing on the seven, refuting the denial of their existence. Other scholars soon followed suit.)

@bookhistodons

bibliolater , to bookstodon
@bibliolater@qoto.org avatar

Seeing Dante’s Commedia in Print from the Renaissance to Today

"An intensely envisioned journey through the three realms of the Christian afterlife (Inferno, Purgatory, and Paradise), Dante’s poem, written in the early 1300s, was the subject of vivid illustrations from its earliest circulation and, when book making transitioned into the new medium of print in the late 1400s, Dante’s poem became the source of inspiration for new visual traditions."

https://historyofthebook.mml.ox.ac.uk/seeing-dantes-commedia-in-print-from-the-renaissance-to-today/

@bookstodon

WerkstattGeschichte , to bookhistodons German
@WerkstattGeschichte@openbiblio.social avatar

Am heutigen greifen wir zu unserem Heft 86/2022 mit Thementeil "papierkram", hg. von Michaela Hohkamp; darin u.a. Beiträge zu im um 1800 (Charlotte Zweynert) und zum Verschwinden der aus modernen (Wilfried Enderle @subugoe):
▶️ https://werkstattgeschichte.de/alle_ausgaben/papierkram/

@bookstodon @histodons @bookhistodons @historikerinnen

dbellingradt , to random
@dbellingradt@historians.social avatar
dbellingradt , to histodons
@dbellingradt@historians.social avatar

"Is there a doctor here?"
"I am a doctor!"
"Oh, thank God - what kind of doctor are you?"
"Doctor of media and "
"My friend is dying!"
"Don't worry, we'll print a nice pamphlet about your friend's life with a red and black ink title page and a false but funny imprint"

(Posted this on my old account months ago, here we go again @histodons ).

dbellingradt , to histodons
@dbellingradt@historians.social avatar

(Posted this on my old account months ago, here we are @histodons ).


Flight attendant: Is there a doctor on the plane?

Me: Yes, but not the useful kind.

Flight attendant: The crew are arguing over whether early modern should pay more attention to the material flows of the paper trade or not.

Me: halfway down plane

dbellingradt , to bookstodon German
@dbellingradt@historians.social avatar

Someone around 1800, I guess, liked very much to cut out and collect woodcuts, in fact hundreds of them, many hundreds, and glued these prints into a new volume. For experts, such collections are both fun and horror - and potential future work. There is no commentary, dear .

Have a look: https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:66:fuldig-7365590

How many other volumes of such cut and paste volumes of early modern printed images do you know?
@histodons @bookstodon @librarians

dbellingradt , to histodons German
@dbellingradt@historians.social avatar

"I am still reading the book ..." @histodons @bookstodon

wvmierlo , to bookstodon
@wvmierlo@zirk.us avatar

Forgeries are a common topic in book history, but what about fraudulent claims about copyright ownership?

Simon Kövesi | John Clare out of Copyright https://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2024/january/john-clare-out-of-copyright
>‘It was not very manly of you to evade telling me what you had been up to when we met today,’ the late Eric Robinson...

@bookstodon

dbellingradt , to histodons German
@dbellingradt@historians.social avatar

This is highly useful if you work with books of all kinds: a compiled and explained set of contemporary . From apothecaries' weights to signs for half moon moments in almanacs. Boost, and looking for abbreviations of the past. @histodons

The "Falttafel" of 1782 is part of a book titled "Sammlung verschiedener nützlicher Lesübungen..." (VD18 12041491-001), and can be found here between pp. 151 and 152: https://www.bavarikon.de/object/bav:UBA-HSB-00000BAV80014690

The "Falttafel" of 1782 is part a German book titled "Sammlung verschiedener nützlicher Lesübungen..." (VD18 12041491-001), and can be found here between pages 151 and 152: https://www.bavarikon.de/object/bav:UBA-HSB-00000BAV80014690

wvmierlo , to bookstodon
@wvmierlo@zirk.us avatar

Always nice to hold a new publication in your hand.

"Genetic Criticism and Modern Palaeography: The Cultural Forms of Modern Literary Manuscripts"

@bookstodon

ModernDayBartleby , to bookstodon
@ModernDayBartleby@mstdn.plus avatar

And so it begins -
PASSING by Nella Larsen (1929) via Oshun Publishing imbibed at Yanaka Coffee
@bookstodon

ModernDayBartleby OP ,
@ModernDayBartleby@mstdn.plus avatar

TO MAKE NEGRO LITERATURE: WRITING, LITERARY PRACTICE, & AFRICAN AMERICAN AUTHORSHIP by Elizabeth McHenry via @dukepress brewed with Philz Coffee Philtered Soul Blend

@bookstodon

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