Descriptive Bibliography, RBS (July 2010)
Introduction to the Principles of Descriptive Bibliography, Rare Book School (Charlottesville, VA) July 26-30; Richard Noble, David Whitesell
Making of a book like the making of a sausage -- what cannot be in two places at once
Book as an assemblage -- assemblage of assemblages; things all the way down -- synchronic assemblages (forms, type) and diachronic assemblages (same piece of type can occur only once in a form, but can reappear later in other forms)
Book is modular: early example of modular building
Book is fungible, but bibliography is looking for patterns
Bibliography is an attempt to reverse-engineer the book
Bibliography
pagination: omit detailed records of routine omissions (chapter headings, etc.), because disguises actual interesting bits of omission (don't make something simple look complicated, or something complicated look simple); pagination should always come out even (foliation should generally come out even); use commas to separate sections
use commas sparingly
put number of unnumbered pages in italics in brackets
ideal copy conforms to issue -- is simply a reference standard, not a "perfect" copy (somewhat of an oxymoron); like an "average" copy
basic unit that we're trying to get back to is the form -- the printing surface; e.g., take any sheets cut from one part and stuck in another, and show that in the formula
assume printing begins with the first page of text
π1 A-C^2 [D]1
or?
π1 [=D2] A-C^2 [D]^2 (-D2)
example: Hoyle card games book; owners could bring in their copy of the book to get new pages added to the front, refresh their editions -- this is a concern of issue
example: only "ideal copy" of Shakespeare's First Folio is Hinman's facsimile edition, since it contains only corrected sheets
alike as peas, or alike as buttons?
formula is basis for making meaning out of the structure of the book
relationship between printed formula and issue formula == analysis
formula is encoding relationships; not simply enumerative practice, but analytic
edition: all those iterations of a text from a given composition
("work", "expression", "manifestation", "item" -- cataloging terms that work for multiple media)
leaf is a binding phenomenon, not a printing phenomenon (that would be the form, which deals with pages) i.e., bibliographer's unit is the page (occupying a certain position in a form with other pages, binder's unit is the leaf
Greg saw collation formula as a way of reference; Bowers took this and said it was a report of a particular analysis
table of contents comes after pagination; important in understanding how important anomalies are in regards to the content
cancellations: H^4(+/-H3); H(H3) refers to the inserted leaf; H3 refers to the cancelled original
quasi-facsimile transcription: some problems: no "W" in type font; English printers soldered together two "V"s; if totally separate, write them totally separate, if not, write "W" and indicate in note;
antiquarian practice now, though (why do it?); can't get across white spaces or exact vertical relationships; often doesn't putll out important differences
Paper
pre-1820, almost certain to be handmade; post-1840, almost certain to be machine-made 1820-1840, transitional phase
laid and wove can be handmade or machine-made
in Western world, all paper up to 1760 is laid
handmade laid paper: around chainlines, paper pulp gathers more, creating bar shadows -- 1/4in. darker area -- incicates handmade paper
white/light spot on paper -- created from a drop of paper that forms a depression (vatman's tears)
mold side: meets the paper mold; has a kind of grid line characteristic felt side: meets the felt; flatter, smoother
shadowless laid paper: modern handmade laid paper that doesn't produce bar shadows
Brits leaders in machine-made paper; by 1820s, very rare to find handmade paper in London
in German-speaking territories, handmade paper used well into 1840s
some early wove papers, you still get chainline-like impressions -- rib marks
machine-made paper: two ways -- pulp spread on continuous belt (Fourdrinier), or on revolving drum of wire mesh (cylinder and vat machine); other impressions can be made on it by running it under a dandyroll (e.g. fake chainlines, watermarks
deckle edge can be found on cylinder vat machine; usually cylinder creates continuous web, but if dropped onto rubber belt with felt shapes on it, pulp sticks to felt but runs away from rubber; can create different shapes
watermarks:
- originally identified the papermill;
- by 1830, indicates paper size and quality
- by c18, find paper with no watermark at all
- location of watermark varies
- identifying watermarks not exact
describing paper:
- dimensions
- watermarks, countermarks
- thickness of paper
- thickness of book / number of leaves
- chainline patterns and widths
- number of wirelines in 3cm space
paper as bibliographical evidence:
- anomalies
- deckle edges, cut edges
Printing
type is not an abstraction, not the printed impression, but an object - something you pick up in your hand
diagram of type: page 9 in Gaskel, page 31 in RBS workbook
Phillip Gaskell, "A nomenclature for the letter-forms of Roman type," The Library 5.29 (1974): 42-51.
comparing typefaces:
- x-height; also relative relation of ascenders to descenders
- axis or stress; draw vertical line through "o" -- is it vertical or oblique?
- weight: thin and light letters, or thick and heavy?
- contrast (difference bw thick and thin spaces -- greater diff in 19c on)
- set -- how much relative space does the font take up?
- serifs
point size introduced in 18c; 72 points in an inch; measured ascender to descender
ascender and descender between two lines; if space between them, lines have been leaded to create space between them
list of common type sizes of hand-press period: pg 35 in RBS workbook
paper is printed wet; shrinkage may change height of type impression
some type may not be set solid (ascender hits bottom of body / descender hits top of body), but leaded (space between top of ascender / bottom of descender and body) -- i.e., body size is different from font size
15c, up to 300 sorts in a font
ligature: joining of letters
logotype: several letters together on one sort
kerned: ascenders/descenders going above/below the body of the type
em, en: "M" is square; em is size of capital "M"; en the size of capital "N"
titling type: height matches body size, doesn't account for ascenders; didn't include puncuation, so sometimes comma in titles will be set high (see pg. 33 of RBS workbook)
by 16c, typefounding becomes specialist -- number of available fonts goes down; within any one firm, there is standardization
Tanselle, "Identification of Typefaces" -- RBS exit reading list T50
Bookbinding
until recently, tend to study bookbinding through decoration; in the last generation, others beginning to study the structure
David Pearson -- item B25 on exit reading list
bookbinding trade: low status, modest profits
in earlier period, more likely for folios to be nested; by 18c, more common for folios to be in 2s, and begin to see 2-on and 3-on sewing, in which several gatherings were sewed alternatively
can find trade/retail and custom/bespoke bindings at any end of the spectrum
printers try print most efficiently; paper most expensive thing that went into the book
printer furnishes the bookbinder with a kit of sheets, as well as instructions for binding; instructions had to be understood in multiple languages, so signature marks developed
start to see signature marks in 1470s (see them earlier, but often by hand)
manuscripts also have marks indicating binding structure
register: printer's explicit statement of what constituted the book -- how sheets are signed and arranged (16c); persisted longest in Venice; expanded signatures, may have been legal document showing book to be "collated and perfect" (see workbook pg. 20)
if printer doesn't tell bookbinder where the plates go, up to the bookbinder to determine it
cancelled leaves: can either leave stub on cancelled leaf, or the leaf to pasted to; sometimes hard to determine where the stub is
collational formula affected by bookbinder's decisions