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Book History Workshop

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OVERVIEW

ENROLLMENT

COST

HOUSING

CAMPUS MAPS

LECTURES

TRAVEL

WORKSHOP STAFF

PREVIOUS WORKSHOPS

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Common Press forme

Overview

The eighth annual Texas A&M Workshop in the History of Books and Printing will take place May 17-22, 2009, in the Cushing Memorial Library and Archives. This five-day workshop provides an intensive, hands-on introduction to the history of books and printing. The workshop is intended for librarians, archivists, students, teachers, collectors, and private individuals who have an interest in the first three and a half centuries of the printed book. The course consists of a unique combination of labs and seminars designed to provide students with practical experience, as well as a broad historical survey of the field. The lab sessions will concentrate on printing in the hand press era and its allied technologies--typecasting, papermaking, bookbinding, illustration, and ink-making. During these sessions, students will have the opportunity to cast type in a hand mould. They will also set type, prepare it for the press, and print on a period-accurate common press. The seminar sessions will provide a chronological survey of book and printing history, with the collections of Cushing Memorial Library providing examples of some of the most significant artifacts and books in the history of recorded culture. These classes will begin chronologically with Mesopotamian clay tablets and medieval manuscripts, before focusing on developments in the hand press era. 

The workshop begins with a reception at 6:00 p.m. Sunday evening.  Workshop sessions begin at 8:30 a.m. each day and, minus breaks and lunch, end at 5:00 p.m., except for Friday, which wraps up at noon with a wayzgoose, a reenactment of the annual party traditionally thrown by the master printer for his journeymen and apprentices. While the morning and afternoon sessions are limited to workshop participants, the evening lectures are free and open to the public. The lectures begin at 7:00 p.m.
 

Enrollment and Application    


The workshop is limited to 20 students. Applications are welcome beginning December 1 and will be accepted until May. Admissions will be made on a rolling basis and will be made in light of each applicant’s needs in relation to the course content. Applicants are reminded that this is an introductory course intended for those with little or no exposure to the subject. On the application form, potential students should clearly identify the link or links between the subject matter of the workshop and their professional, academic, vocational, or avocational interests.

REGISTER ONLINE

Cost    


$700 registration fee, $100.00 of which is due at the time of admittance.  Participants who have not remitted their deposit or made other arrangements with us within three weeks of acceptance may be dropped from the workshop to accommodate other applicants.  Refunds are available up to three weeks before the course begins.   The full payment is due on the day you arrive.

Housing  

Cushing facade

Discounted accommodations are available at The Tradition, a recently-built commercial dormitory. Private suites cost $36.50 per night and include daily breakfast. The Tradition is located in the Northgate area adjacent to campus; there are multiple restaurants within a couple of blocks. Cushing is about a 12-15 minute walk. All arrangements for accommodations in this dormitory will be made through Cushing Library. You can learn more about The Tradition by visiting their website.

Workshop participants may also stay in one of the many local hotels. Rates vary. If you choose to stay off campus, you will need a car, as there is no off-campus hotel within easy walking distance of the Cushing Library.  You will also still need a parking pass. If you choose to stay off campus, please let us know when you register for the workshop.  You are responsible for your own reservations if you stay off campus.

Travel  


Directions to the campus and the Cushing Library are available online.

Located in what National Public Radio has described as the “lush central Texas countryside,” Texas A&M University is within easy access of most of the major metropolitan areas in Texas: Austin is about 2 hours, Houston 1 ½ hours, Dallas 2 ½ - 3 hours, San Antonio 2 ½ - 3 hours.  Commuter flights to Easterwood Airport in College Station, and minutes from the A&M campus, are available on SkyWest from Houston Intercontinental airport and on American from Dallas/Fort Worth.  If you fly into Easterwood Airport, cab fare from the airport to the campus or nearby is about $12.00.

Workshop Staff  


Steven Escar Smith, workshop director and instructor, is Associate Dean for Collections and Services, Texas A&M University Libraries (Ph.D., Texas A&M; M.A., M.L., South Carolina). His publications include Roy Fuller: A Bibliography (Scolar, 1996) and American Book and Magazine Illustrators to 1920 (Gale, 1998) and essays and reviews in Studies in Bibliography, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, Book Collector, Imprint, ANQ, Analytical and Enumerative Bibliography, Rare Books and Manuscripts Librarianship, and elsewhere.  He has also spent the better part of the last decade gathering and acquiring the physical things (i.e. the books, printing tools, artifacts, facsimiles, etc.) that form the core of this workshop. Smith is director and organizer of the workshop.

Todd Samuelson, assistant director of programs and printer in residence, is the Outreach Curator at the Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M University (Ph.D., University of Houston, M.A., Boston College). His research interests include modern and contemporary literature, poetry in translation, and the history of fine press and artists' books. His writing has appeared in various journals, including Agni, Poetry, Southwest Review, Prairie Schooner, and Lyric. His imprint, Fat Matter Press, specializes in letterpress chapbooks and artists' books of contemporary poetry, including a recent Czeslaw Milosz broadside. He is also a graduate of the 2006 Workshop.

Christopher L. Morrow, visiting instructor, is an Assistant Professor of English at Western Illinois University (Ph.D., M.A., Texas A&M). Morrow is currently working on a book project which examines the emergence of nationalism in early modern literature and drama and how the material book and London book trade affected the dynamics of nationalism in these works. Morrow is the author of “Shakespeare and Pedagogy: A Bibliography” (Shakespeare Yearbook, 2002). He is also a graduate of the 2004 Workshop.
 

Evening Lecturers/Activities

Larry Mitchell and Nicholas Basbanes


2009 Lectures


Larry Mitchell will deliver a talk entitled “The Garnett Family and the World of Books” on Monday, May 18.   Mitchell, a professor of English and currently interim Head of the Department of Hispanic Studies, also served as the President of the Friends of the Sterling C. Evans Library from 2008-2009.  Much of his collection of books and artifacts is now housed at Cushing Library.  His collecting interests include English literature between the first and second World Wars, dictionaries, and boxing.

Nicholas Basbanes will return to Cushing Library on Wednesday, May 20, to present a talk in the Book History Workshop lecture series.  Basbanes is a noted author, journalist, and rare book specialist.  His first book, A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and was named a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.  Basbanes has been described as “our leading authority of books about books.”  He is considered the pre-eminent spokesman on books, collecting, and issues concerning the printed word in the 21st century.

2008 Lectures


Michael Winship will deliver a talk entitled "American Publishers' Bindings and the Book Trades" the evening of May 19th. Winship, Professor of English at the University of Texas at Austin, has written extensively about the history of publishing and the book trade in nineteenth-century America. His volume on American printing during the industrial era, part of the History of the Book in America series, appeared from the University of North Carolina Press in 2007. He has taught annually at the University of Virginia's Rare Book School since 1983.

Craig Kallendorf will present a lecture, "Printing the Classics: Building a Virgil Collection in the Twenty-First Century," on Wednesday, May 21. Kallendorf, Professor of English at Texas A&M University and the Editor of Allegorica: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Literature and Rhetorica, has written extensively in the fields of Renaissance literature, Classics, and Rhetoric. Last year, he published The Virgilian Tradition: Book History and the History of Reading in Early Modern Europe as well as A Companion to the Classical Tradition.

2007 Lectures


Rebecca Laroche will deliver a lecture entitled, "'Helpes in their own fieldes and gardens': Early modern women's ownership of English herbals."  Laroche is an Associate Professor at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.  She has published several articles on early modern women, and her current book-length project, Herbal Rhetoric:  Women's Texts and the Location of Medical Authority in England, 1550-1650, has received support from the Huntington, Folger Shakespeare, and Yale Beinecke libraries and the Institute for the Medical Humanities in Galveston, TX, where she is currently visiting fellow.

Fernando González Moreno will present "Illustrating don Quixote: a brief history of book illustration techniques."  A Visiting Scholar and the current University of Castilla-La Mancha Cervantes Chair Research Fellow, Dr. Gonzalez Moreno received his Ph.D. in Art History from the University of Castilla-La Mancha and is the author of El Quijote de las luces: Ilustraciones para la edición de la Imprenta Real, 1797-1798 (2004),  as well as several articles and book chapters.  While at Texas A&M, Dr. Moreno has worked closely with the Eduardo Urbina Cervantes Project Collection in Cushing, and his lecture will draw upon this research.

Stephen Pratt, printer and craftsman in residence (M.A., BYU, and further graduate work at Berkeley), will discuss his theory and methodology in recreating iron presses and associated equipment. With his son Ben, Pratt is proprietor of Pratt Press Works, a family business specializing in replica printing and type-casting equipment.  He is a member of the Gutenberg Geselleschaft, Arbeitskreis Druckeschichte, the Wood Engravers Network, the Fine Press Book Association, and was one of the organizers of the 2002 American Typecasting Fellowship conference, which was held at the Crandall Historical Printing Museum in Provo, Utah.
 

2006 Lectures

Eduardo Urbina will discuss "A Textual History of the Quixote, 1605-2005."  Dr. Urbina obtained his Ph.D. at the University of California at Berkeley (1979) and is currently Professor of Hispanic Studies at Texas A&M University, and Visiting Professor and Director of the Cervantes Chair at the University of Castilla-La Mancha. As a "cervantista," he is the author of Principios y fines del Quijote (Maryland: Scripta Humanistica, 1990), El sin par Sancho Panza: Parodia y creación (Barcelona: Anthropos, 1991), and editor of 'Don Quixote' Illustrated (2005). He has published over 90 articles and book chapters in Anales Cervantinos (Spain), Iberoamericana (Germany), Espéculo (Spain), Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica (México), Cervantes, Romanistisches Jarhbuch, Romance Quarterly, the Bulletin of Spanish Studies, Insula, among other places. He is the Director of the Cervantes Project (http://cervantes. tamu.edu/), and editor of the Electronic Variorum Edition of the Quixote, the Anuario Bibliográfico Cervantino, the Anuario de Estudios Cervantinos, and the Biblioteca  Cervantes series. He is founding member of the Cervantes Society of America, member of the North American Academy of the Spanish Language, and Honorary Curator of the Cervantes Project Collection at the Cushing Memorial Library, Texas A&M University.

Gary A. Stringer
will speak about "Donne as a Manuscript Poet."  Dr. Stringer came to Texas A&M University as a Visiting Professor in the fall of 2004, having previously retired from the English faculty of the University of Southern Mississippi. He has published articles on Donne, Milton, and various other Renaissance figures, and has edited two collections of essays on Donne. In 1981 Stringer organized the project to produce The Variorum Edition of the Poetry of John Donne and assumed the role of General Editor of the edition, a position he still holds. At A&M, Stringer teaches in the English department and continues his work on the Variorum, the fourth volume of which was published in December of 2005 by Indiana University Press.

Funding for this event has been generously provided by the Friends of the Texas A&M University Libraries, the Sterling C. Evans Library, the Loran L. Laughlin Printing Arts Endowment, the John H. Hinton Endowment, Melbern G. Glasscock Center for Humanities Research, and the C. Clifford Wendler Professorship. 

Contact information:

Cushing Memorial Library & Archives
ATTN: Todd Samuelson
Texas A&M University
College Station, TX 77843-5000
Phone:    (979) 845-1951
Fax:    (979) 845-1441
E-Mail:    todd.samuelson@tamu.edu
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