Adams and Barker 1993: Difference between revisions

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term "book" doesn't include broadsides, ephemera, etc.; Adams and Baker propose '''"bibliographical document"''' (13) -- limit is if "the agent's intention involves the process of duplication" (13)
term "book" doesn't include broadsides, ephemera, etc.; Adams and Baker propose '''"bibliographical document"''' (13) -- limit is if "the agent's intention involves the process of duplication" (13)
'''new model''':
* still a circle of connected elements influenced by elements in the center
* but elements inverted
* indirect forces outside, exerting pressure
* five events in the life of a book: ''publishing, manufacturing, distribution, reception, survival''
'''publishing''':
* four parties: author, patron/financier, manufacturer, distributor
* four headings: creation, communication, profit, preservation
* "The decision to publish, not the creation of a text, is, then, the first step in the creation of a book." (18); often influenced heavily by factors not intrinsic to the text
'''manufacturing''':
* how to include the printing press in a more general history of technology? (18-9)
* manufacture of illustrations, graphics? (19)
* manufacture of paper, ink? (19)
* physical look and feel of the book carries evidence of provenance; "deserves more attention as an aspect of the impact of printing" (20)
* binding: structure and appearance (20); progressive decline in durability of both

Revision as of 20:28, 28 August 2010

Adams, Thomas R. and Nicolas Barker. "A New Model for the Study of the Book." A Potencie of Life: Books in Society. Ed. Nicolas Barker. London: British Library, 1993. 5-43.

Martin, Febvre, The coming of the book -- began tradition of "the history of the book"

Eisenstein presented a critique of history with Printing Press -- social revolutions caused by printing press, rather than other way around; Darnton, too, focusing on Enlightenment

the bibliographer is thus "unexpectedly dragged into the limelight by academic historians" (6)

bibliography used to occupy same position as archaeology; but now seems doomed always to be a handmiden to other disciplines

quintessentially interdisciplinary

"The power of books is not just what strikes the eye, but what may be latent, to be disclosed in the future." (9)
  • "latent power is vastly magnified by the multiplicity of copies" (9)

bibliographers often too content "to dig their own small patch"; social historians can add much (10)

criticisms of Darnton's communication circuit:

  • term "publisher" is anachronistic
  • shipper (simply providing a service as he would for any other commodity) not as important as more general lines of communication
  • most importantly, deals with people rather than books (12); focuses on history of communication
  • "it ignores the sheer randomness, the speculative uncertainty of the book trade." (12)

term "book" doesn't include broadsides, ephemera, etc.; Adams and Baker propose "bibliographical document" (13) -- limit is if "the agent's intention involves the process of duplication" (13)

new model:

  • still a circle of connected elements influenced by elements in the center
  • but elements inverted
  • indirect forces outside, exerting pressure
  • five events in the life of a book: publishing, manufacturing, distribution, reception, survival

publishing:

  • four parties: author, patron/financier, manufacturer, distributor
  • four headings: creation, communication, profit, preservation
  • "The decision to publish, not the creation of a text, is, then, the first step in the creation of a book." (18); often influenced heavily by factors not intrinsic to the text

manufacturing:

  • how to include the printing press in a more general history of technology? (18-9)
  • manufacture of illustrations, graphics? (19)
  • manufacture of paper, ink? (19)
  • physical look and feel of the book carries evidence of provenance; "deserves more attention as an aspect of the impact of printing" (20)
  • binding: structure and appearance (20); progressive decline in durability of both