I just ran accross an announcement for a new publication. and thought many of you would be interested:
A Catalogue of Books Printed in the Fifteenth Century now in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.
Alan Coates, Kristian Jensen, Cristina Dondi, Bettina Wagner and Helen Dixon.
6 vols.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Price: £600.00 (Hardback)
ISBN 0-19-951373-2
Publication date: 7 July 2005
3088 pages, 276 mm x 219mmmm
Description
INTRODUCTORY OFFER £600
Represents a major contribution to the study of the history of the book
Catalogues the world’s fifth largest collection of fifteenth-century western printed books
Includes a valuable provenance index
Compiled to the highest modern standards
The Bodleian’s incunable catalogue describes the Library’s fifteenth-century western printed books to the same standards expected in the best modern catalogues of medieval manuscripts. It records and identifies all texts contained in each volume, and the detailed analysis of the textual content is an innovative feature. Further information about authors, editors, translators, and dedicatees is given in an extensive index of names, complete with biographical and other information; this index will be of interest to textural scholars from the classical period to the renaissance. The detailed descriptions of the copy-specific features of each book (the binding, hand-decoration and hand-finishing, marginalia, and provenance) form another important contribution to scholarship. The provenance index will be of great value to all those interested in the history of the book from the 1450s to the present day.
Readership: Scholars and students of the history of the book from the 1450s to the present day; textual scholars from the classical period to the renaissance
Contents
R. P. Carr, Director of University Library Services and Bodley’s Librarian: Preface
List of Organisations and Individuals who sponsored cataloguing project
List of Members of the Cataloguing Team
List of Academic Advisers
Acknowledgements
Bibliographical abbreviations
General abbreviations
INTRODUCTIONAlan Coates:
(a) Historical introduction
(i) acquisition of incunubala
(ii) housing of incunabula
(iii) cataloguing of incunabula
(b) The form of the entries in the Catalogue
THE CATALOGUE
(a) Nigel Palmer: Blockbooks
(b) Western incunabula, A-Z
(c) Silke Schaeper: Lisf of Hebraica
INDEXES
(a) Authors, Translators, Editors, Dedicatees
(b) Owners and Donors
(c) Printers and Publishers
APPENDICES
(a) Items recorded by L. A. Sheppard, but not included in the Catalogue
(b) Items included in ISTC, but excluded from the Catalogue
(c) List of items in Schreiber ‘Woodcuts from Books of the XVth Century’
Authors, editors, and contributors
Alan Coates, Assistant Librarian, Rare Books, Dept of Special Collections & Western MSS, & Head of Incunable Cataloguing Project, Bodleian Library, Oxford,
Kristian Jensen, Head of British & Early Printed Collections, The British Library, London,
Cristina Dondi, J. P. R. Lyell Research Fellow in the History of the Early Modern Printed Book, University of Oxford,
Bettina Wagner, Head of Incunable Cataloguing, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich, Germany,
Helen Dixon, British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow, The Warburg Institute, University of London
This Chronicle piece, hereafter known as the Tribble Drivel, came out Friday, but I was off-line (and up to my nether regions in Pine Sol, thankyouverymuch) completing The Move From Hell cleaning rituals. So for the last 24 I’ve been bouncing around catching up with all that was said over the weekend, and rather than just respond to ‘Tribble’ and say what has already been said (and likely, said with more eloquence) I’ll suspend my regular wordy rambling in favor of a list of some of the responses I’ve read, in case there’s someone y’all haven’t caught, yet:
There. I suppose it’s time to admit that one of my faults is a chronic urge to be helpful.
(I’m sure there are three former applicants to a small liberal arts college who are darn thankful they dodged that bullet.)
La Profesora Abstraida also comments, and handily categorizes blogs.
Contrast the drivel to Ralph E. Luker’s Were There Blog Enough and Time, which I have been meaning to blog about, but there’s this pesky move, and all. Read it. Let the hollow place inside you left by troublesome ‘TribbleÂ’ be re-filled.
I had a few thoughts on the Leader article. I had originally posted the link last week, but have only had time to re-read it and comment now:
First: all written communication is contrived and the forms of written communication carry with them built-in cultural assumptions and limitations. I think this goes without saying.
Second: the fascism of the format? Consider that, ignoring the issue of paper v. electronics, a newspaper is really just a heavily-structured group blog. Does news happen on a 24 hour publishing cycle? Or history — how absurd and fascist to try to fit the events of human history into a few hundred or thousand pages. I agree that it would be “more than a little unreasonable to declare a mode of communication fascist just because of the mode’s popularity”, however this doesn’t seem to be slowing Leader down any.
Third: I also find it interesting that Leader misses the most obvious delimiter for blogs – it isn’t sex or race but age. It isn’t difficult to run across a lot of blogs by blacks, Asians, whites, transvestites…but I, for one, rarely run across a blog maintained by someone over 50. Blogging is disproportionately a youth movement. Even the non-Western world is more represented than the AARP set – you can find plenty of Iraqi, Indian, Iranian, etc. blogs. (the only continent not well represented is Africa, but due to its extreme poverty it’s not merely blogging that is under-represented). Come to think of it, why is he trying to shoehorn human experience into the rationalist fascist media of formal publications, which inherently empower white males and enforces passive rather than active engagement with the world. Besides, are there even really such things as “publications”? The word originated in the late 14th century to signify making something “public” but what exactly is this “public” but an artificial construct that excluded women and ethnic minorities behind its facade of an all-encompassing rational human community.
It’s a pea and shell game.
Leader complains that blogs turn the internet into the equivalent of a high school popularity contest with the whining edge to his prose that one might expect from the second-runner-up for class president. Many, if not most, of the blogs I read bare little resemblance to the grasping and greedy bastions of solipsism he luridly describes. And very f-ing frankly, his characterization of female bloggers, feminine forms of communication, and insulting and assumptive. “Those people who are less able to exploit the new (and almost-mandatory) format for electronic communication”? Women! I’m surprised he doesn’t quote the President of Harvard University when yipping about gender in ways that echo Summers’ “innate differences”. Barbie once said “Math is hard!” Leader has her saying “Blogging is hard!” Mattel corrected their transgression, will Leader?
(Be the hit of your next party or gathering! Every time Leader uses the word ‘patriarchy’, drink!!)
House of the medieval dead lurks in lawyers’ basement
More found objects:
From Cronaca:
After 2,600 years, the world gains a fourth poem by Sappho
Traces of hidden Leonardo sketch revealed
And found at Mirabilis.ca: Statue of Orpheus unearthed
I think what George is trying to say is ‘We shouldn’t have provoked Hitler over Poland!’
(#1513 Respect MP George Galloway says: “We argued, as did the security services in this country, that the attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq would increase the threat of terrorist attack in Britain. Tragically Londoners have now paid the price of the Government ignoring such warnings.”)
Attaboy, George.
Winston Churchill to V-E Day crowds, Whitehall London, 8th May 1945
There we stood, alone. Did anyone want to give in? Were we down-hearted?
The lights went out and the bombs came down. But every man, woman and
child in the country had no thought of quitting the struggle. London can
take it. So we came back after long months from the jaws of death, out
of the mouth of hell, while all the world wondered. When shall the
reputation and faith of this generation of English men and women fail? I
say that in the long years to come not only will the people of this
island but of the world, wherever the bird of freedom chirps in human
hearts, look back to what we’ve done and they will say “do not despair,
do not yield to violence and tyranny, march straightforward and die if
need be – unconquered.” Now we have emerged from one deadly struggle – a
terrible foe has been cast on the ground and awaits our judgment and our
mercy.
But there is another foe…a foe stained with cruelty….We must begin
the task of rebuilding our health and homes, doing our utmost to make
this country a land in which all have a chance, in which all have a
duty, and we must turn ourselves to fulfil our duty to our own
countrymen, and to our gallant allies of the United States who were so
foully and treacherously attacked….We will go hand and hand with them.
Even if it is a hard struggle we will not be the ones who will fail.
[as previously posted in my lj]
Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts
“The Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts encompasses more than 60,000 searchable entries of manuscripts written before 1600 and consisting of five or more leaves. This database is intended to be a powerful tool in:
It includes bibliographic information culled from approximately 4,000 catalogues issued by 400 dealers and auction houses since the early nineteenth century. This data is supplemented by entries from inventories and catalogues of private and institutional libraries. With twenty-nine searchable fields, it provides broad access to manuscripts through a range of discrete descriptive (i.e., vendor, catalogue name or number, item number, price, etc.) and physical (leaves, size, illuminations, etc.) properties. Multiple references to the same manuscript are cross-referenced to facilitate the tracking of individual manuscripts. The database is updated and augmented periodically on an ongoing basis.”
I don’t know that I can express clearly enough how much I dislike the smell of bluelines. CfP rolling right along…
And an additional note to Friday’s post about tile: I have a bunch* of 8X8 bathroom tile, now, too – windsurf. Good thing because I want so badly to pull everything off the walls and re-plumb the main bath I can hardly stand it.
*in this case, a bunch is about 100 tiles.
I edited the other post to include direct links to the 12X12 tile colors. I have mostly taupe, with a little over 50% of that number the ebony, and less than 20% the stipple, so I need to get some graph paper out and plan, plan, plan.
Thanks to Cacciaguida for a link to the news in Latin.
Library turns over new leaf, from Mirabilis.ca.
A comment from a friend has led me to make this suggestion: how about a Congress badge with only a picture of a Penny Farthing and a number? (I’d want to be number 6, of course.)
*cue Rover*
A chronology from HNN.
This space opened for business June 3, 2003. Second anniversary come and gone.
I shouldn’t comment with the headache filter on, so I’ll do that later.