Bowers 1949
Bowers, Fredson. Principles of Bibliographical Description. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1949.
Descriptive Bibliography
catalogue or handlist: compilation of titles on a given subject
descriptive or analytical bibliography: describing printed variations of a text
(some "bibliographical catalogues" exist between these two forms)
- "The concern of the descriptive bibliographer ... is to examine every available copy of an edition of a book in order to describe in bibliographical terms the characteristics of an ideal copy of this edition, to distinguish between issues and variants of the edition, to explain and describe the printing and textual history of the edition, and finally to arrange it in a correct and logical relationship to other editions." (6)
bibliographies may help librarians and collectors identify the books in their possession, "but from the bibliographer's point of view this possibility should be only a by-product of his work. The facts, the distinguishing 'points' are the necessary main concern of the collector or librarian. these are of crucial importance in bibliography, too, but only as the penultimate step to textual and literary criticism." (8)
"true bibliography is the bridge to textual, which is to say literary, criticism." (9)
- "The purpose, then, of the physical description of the book is twofold: to serve as a basis for the analysis of the method of publication, which has a direct bearing on the relations and transmissions of texts; to provide sufficient evidence for readers to identify books in their possession as being members of the precise state, issue, impression, and edition of the 'ideal copy' listed, or as being unrecorded variants requiring further bibliographical investigation." (23)
symbols must be standardized for bibliography to retain meaning (24-5)
"Analytical bibliography deals with books and their relations solely as material objects, and in a strict sense has nothing to do with the historical or literary considerations of their subject matter or content." (31)
Format and Collational Formula
Format
Quarter-sheet - 1/4° or q.s. or qs Half-sheet - 1/2° or h.s. or hs Broadsheet - 1° or b.s. or bs Folio - 2° or fol. Quarto - 4° or 4to or Q° or Q Octavo - 8° or 8vo Duodecimo - 12° or 12mo Sexto-decimo - 16° or 16mo Tricesimo-secundo - 32° or 32mo Sexagesimo-quarto - 64° or 64mo
sometimes double-size sheets were made, then probably cut in two before being printed;
- folio would then be the size of a bs, quarto the size of a folio, etc., but still takes the format name based on how it's folded
- Greg suggests adding a note such as: (2°-form) 4°
broadsheet has printing parallel to short side; if printing is parallel to longer side, should be called an oblong broadsheet; indicated by:
- 1°(obl.), etc.
if no figure is possible, oblong or otherwise, called single-piece
- "the statement of the format is a statement of a number of leaves formed by a whole sheet of paper folded to make it ready for binding in the book along with other sheets" (196)
- whole sheet always considered a unit; cutting it to make a half-sheet is the equivalent of a folding
- so a half-sheet folded twice to make four leaves is not a quarto, but an octavo in 4's
Collational Formula
formula is that of an ideal copy