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Fellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are EMPLOYMENT | RARE BOOK SCHOOL This is a full-time, year-round, exempt, salaried position with benefits. Salary commensurate with experience. Benefits will include one free Rare Book School course per year; health insurance (including dental and vision); long-term disability; and 403b retirement plan, including employer’s matching contribution up to 5% (after oneyear).
PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markingsKAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988MIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European RBS MOURNS THE LOSS OF MICHAEL L. TURNER We were saddened to hear of the death last week of Michael L. Turner, longtime Rare Book School friend and faculty member. Michael held various positions at the Bodleian Library throughout his long career at that institution, retiring as Head of Preservation Services. He was also Lecturer in the History of Printing at the University of Oxford, and served as the editor of Publishing History, a RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are EMPLOYMENT | RARE BOOK SCHOOL This is a full-time, year-round, exempt, salaried position with benefits. Salary commensurate with experience. Benefits will include one free Rare Book School course per year; health insurance (including dental and vision); long-term disability; and 403b retirement plan, including employer’s matching contribution up to 5% (after oneyear).
PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markingsKAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988MIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European RBS MOURNS THE LOSS OF MICHAEL L. TURNER We were saddened to hear of the death last week of Michael L. Turner, longtime Rare Book School friend and faculty member. Michael held various positions at the Bodleian Library throughout his long career at that institution, retiring as Head of Preservation Services. He was also Lecturer in the History of Printing at the University of Oxford, and served as the editor of Publishing History, a SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
CERTIFICATE PROGRAM
Certificate Program. In 2011, Rare Book School inaugurated its Certificate of Proficiency Program, which allows students to create a specialized focus for their coursework at RBS and to earn formal recognition for their concentrated studies at the School. The program enables students to plan for and to attend a series of related classesthat
THE BOOK AS ARCHIVE
Alex Hidalgo A Rare Book School lecture followed by a brief Q&A scheduled for Tuesday, 15 June 2021, 5:30–6:30 p.m. ET, via Zoom. Owing to Zoom’s restrictions, this lecture is limited to the first 300 people who register; participants in Rare Book School’s 13–18 June 2021 course week are automatically registered for this event. The lecture will be recorded and made available for later FACULTY | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Rare Book School Rare Book School University of Virginia P.O. Box 400103 Charlottesville, VA 22904 FRAGMENTOLOGY (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 The study of medieval manuscript fragments has developed into its own specialization in recent years, incorporating paleography, codicology, liturgiology, musicology, textual studies, art history, bibliography, provenance, and digital humanities, among other disciplines. In SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally been RARE BOOK CATALOGING “Every single day was as useful and relevant as the last. I’m walking away not only a better, ‘sleeker’ cataloger, but an inspired one as well!” — 2017 student Aimed at catalogers who find that their present duties include (or shortly will include) the cataloging of books in their rare materials or special collections and want to be trained in applying Descriptive Cataloging of INTRODUCTION TO ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS This course is aimed at those who, whether by professional or personal interests, seek some basics on what can be a difficult field. Because of their light-sensitive nature, manuscripts are almost never on permanent exhibition anywhere; furthermore, their consultation is often restricted to the learned few. The course will emphasize illumination, and will thus discuss chronological andPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham. Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library.Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. THE BOOK OF HOURS, 1250–1550 This seminar focuses on the Book of Hours—the medieval “bestseller”—popular for three hundred years, from the mid-thirteenth to the mid-sixteenth century. The course will consider both the textual and pictorial contents of horae. Textual concerns include the range and variety of prayers within the typical manuscript. Students will learn how to determine a book’s usage,including the
RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
CERTIFICATE PROGRAM
Certificate of Proficiency Proposal (Mac users: Please note that the Mac Preview application will not fill out this form correctly.) 1. Frequently Asked Questions Can the 2021 online courses count toward my certificate? Online courses can be applied toward certificates of proficiency as follows: a combination of three 6-hour courses, two 10-hour courses, one 10-hour course and one 6-hour FRAGMENTOLOGY (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 The study of medieval manuscript fragments has developed into its own specialization in recent years, incorporating paleography, codicology, liturgiology, musicology, textual studies, art history, bibliography, provenance, and digital humanities, among other disciplines. In EMPLOYMENT | RARE BOOK SCHOOL This is a full-time, year-round, exempt, salaried position with benefits. Salary commensurate with experience. Benefits will include one free Rare Book School course per year; health insurance (including dental and vision); long-term disability; and 403b retirement plan, including employer’s matching contribution up to 5% (after oneyear).
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markingsMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
CERTIFICATE PROGRAM
Certificate of Proficiency Proposal (Mac users: Please note that the Mac Preview application will not fill out this form correctly.) 1. Frequently Asked Questions Can the 2021 online courses count toward my certificate? Online courses can be applied toward certificates of proficiency as follows: a combination of three 6-hour courses, two 10-hour courses, one 10-hour course and one 6-hour FRAGMENTOLOGY (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 The study of medieval manuscript fragments has developed into its own specialization in recent years, incorporating paleography, codicology, liturgiology, musicology, textual studies, art history, bibliography, provenance, and digital humanities, among other disciplines. In EMPLOYMENT | RARE BOOK SCHOOL This is a full-time, year-round, exempt, salaried position with benefits. Salary commensurate with experience. Benefits will include one free Rare Book School course per year; health insurance (including dental and vision); long-term disability; and 403b retirement plan, including employer’s matching contribution up to 5% (after oneyear).
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markingsMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. EuropeanTHE BOOK AS ARCHIVE
Alex Hidalgo A Rare Book School lecture followed by a brief Q&A scheduled for Tuesday, 15 June 2021, 5:30–6:30 p.m. ET, via Zoom. Owing to Zoom’s restrictions, this lecture is limited to the first 300 people who register; participants in Rare Book School’s 13–18 June 2021 course week are automatically registered for this event. The lecture will be recorded and made available for later FACULTY | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Rare Book School Rare Book School University of Virginia P.O. Box 400103 Charlottesville, VA 22904 APPLY TO RBS COURSES Applications for summer 2021 courses will open in early January. To be considered in the first round of admissions decisions, please submit your application (s) by 8 March. After that date, we will continue to accept applications for courses until they have reached enrollment capacity; if the red “ Apply Now ” button is present on a Course SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally been INTRODUCTION TO ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS This course is aimed at those who, whether by professional or personal interests, seek some basics on what can be a difficult field. Because of their light-sensitive nature, manuscripts are almost never on permanent exhibition anywhere; furthermore, their consultation is often restricted to the learned few. The course will emphasize illumination, and will thus discuss chronological andMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. EuropeanPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988KAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-President RBS MOURNS THE LOSS OF MICHAEL L. TURNER We were saddened to hear of the death last week of Michael L. Turner, longtime Rare Book School friend and faculty member. Michael held various positions at the Bodleian Library throughout his long career at that institution, retiring as Head of Preservation Services. He was also Lecturer in the History of Printing at the University of Oxford, and served as the editor of Publishing History, a HOW TO JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVER: 19TH- AND 20TH-CENTURY How to Judge a Book by Its Cover: 19th- and 20th-Century Cloth Bookbindings. Date: 1 February 2009 – 30 May 2009 Location: Dome Room, UVA Rotunda Curated by: Theresa Goodman '12 This exhibition traces the evolution of book cover design and technology from RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are RARE BOOK CATALOGING “Every single day was as useful and relevant as the last. I’m walking away not only a better, ‘sleeker’ cataloger, but an inspired one as well!” — 2017 student Aimed at catalogers who find that their present duties include (or shortly will include) the cataloging of books in their rare materials or special collections and want to be trained in applying Descriptive Cataloging of PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markingsPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988KAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European RBS MOURNS THE LOSS OF MICHAEL L. TURNER We were saddened to hear of the death last week of Michael L. Turner, longtime Rare Book School friend and faculty member. Michael held various positions at the Bodleian Library throughout his long career at that institution, retiring as Head of Preservation Services. He was also Lecturer in the History of Printing at the University of Oxford, and served as the editor of Publishing History, a RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are RARE BOOK CATALOGING “Every single day was as useful and relevant as the last. I’m walking away not only a better, ‘sleeker’ cataloger, but an inspired one as well!” — 2017 student Aimed at catalogers who find that their present duties include (or shortly will include) the cataloging of books in their rare materials or special collections and want to be trained in applying Descriptive Cataloging of PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markingsPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988KAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European RBS MOURNS THE LOSS OF MICHAEL L. TURNER We were saddened to hear of the death last week of Michael L. Turner, longtime Rare Book School friend and faculty member. Michael held various positions at the Bodleian Library throughout his long career at that institution, retiring as Head of Preservation Services. He was also Lecturer in the History of Printing at the University of Oxford, and served as the editor of Publishing History, a SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
THE BOOK AS ARCHIVE
Alex Hidalgo A Rare Book School lecture followed by a brief Q&A scheduled for Tuesday, 15 June 2021, 5:30–6:30 p.m. ET, via Zoom. Owing to Zoom’s restrictions, this lecture is limited to the first 300 people who register; participants in Rare Book School’s 13–18 June 2021 course week are automatically registered for this event. The lecture will be recorded and made available for laterCERTIFICATE PROGRAM
Certificate of Proficiency Proposal (Mac users: Please note that the Mac Preview application will not fill out this form correctly.) 1. Frequently Asked Questions Can the 2021 online courses count toward my certificate? Online courses can be applied toward certificates of proficiency as follows: a combination of three 6-hour courses, two 10-hour courses, one 10-hour course and one 6-hour FACULTY | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Rare Book School Rare Book School University of Virginia P.O. Box 400103 Charlottesville, VA 22904READING LIST
The Legacy Press, 2014. Course participants can purchase this book and any other TLP title on this reading list at a 25% discount (plus s/h) by emailing the publisher: thelegacypress@gmail.com. Full disclosure: TLP is owned by the course leader. Gaskell, Philip. “ INTRODUCTION TO ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPTS This course is aimed at those who, whether by professional or personal interests, seek some basics on what can be a difficult field. Because of their light-sensitive nature, manuscripts are almost never on permanent exhibition anywhere; furthermore, their consultation is often restricted to the learned few. The course will emphasize illumination, and will thus discuss chronological and THE BOOK OF HOURS, 1250–1550 This seminar focuses on the Book of Hours—the medieval “bestseller”—popular for three hundred years, from the mid-thirteenth to the mid-sixteenth century. The course will consider both the textual and pictorial contents of horae. Textual concerns include the range and variety of prayers within the typical manuscript. Students will learn how to determine a book’s usage,including the
PAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988NICHOLAS PICKWOAD
Nicholas Pickwoad. Nicholas Pickwoad is a book conservator in private practice. From 1992 to 1995, he was Conservator at the Harvard University Library, before which he was Advisor to the National Trust for Conservation.. Courses Formerly OfferedMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOLRARE BOOK SCHOOLVIRGINIA
Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markings SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally beenPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988KAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. EuropeanNICHOLAS PICKWOAD
Nicholas Pickwoad. Nicholas Pickwoad is a book conservator in private practice. From 1992 to 1995, he was Conservator at the Harvard University Library, before which he was Advisor to the National Trust for Conservation. RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOLRARE BOOK SCHOOLVIRGINIA
Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markings SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally beenPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988KAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. EuropeanNICHOLAS PICKWOAD
Nicholas Pickwoad. Nicholas Pickwoad is a book conservator in private practice. From 1992 to 1995, he was Conservator at the Harvard University Library, before which he was Advisor to the National Trust for Conservation.COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
CERTIFICATE PROGRAM
Certificate of Proficiency Proposal (Mac users: Please note that the Mac Preview application will not fill out this form correctly.) 1. Frequently Asked Questions Can the 2021 online courses count toward my certificate? Online courses can be applied toward certificates of proficiency as follows: a combination of three 6-hour courses, two 10-hour courses, one 10-hour course and one 6-hour FACULTY | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Rare Book School Rare Book School University of Virginia P.O. Box 400103 Charlottesville, VA 22904 SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally been FRAGMENTOLOGY (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 The study of medieval manuscript fragments has developed into its own specialization in recent years, incorporating paleography, codicology, liturgiology, musicology, textual studies, art history, bibliography, provenance, and digital humanities, among other disciplines. In RARE BOOK CATALOGING “Every single day was as useful and relevant as the last. I’m walking away not only a better, ‘sleeker’ cataloger, but an inspired one as well!” — 2017 student Aimed at catalogers who find that their present duties include (or shortly will include) the cataloging of books in their rare materials or special collections and want to be trained in applying Descriptive Cataloging of RACE AND THE BOUNDARIES OF THE BOOK: SEVEN EARLY AMERICAN A 45–minute panel discussion followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Tuesday, 20 October 2020, 5–6 p.m. ET, via Zoom. Through video presentations of individual case studies, seven early Americanists zoomed in on a range of bookish artifacts and employed critical bibliography to recover overlooked narratives about race from the historical record. Specifically, they examined how racialized andMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European MICHAEL F. SUAREZ, S.J. Michael F. Suarez, S.J. has served as Director of Rare Book School, Professor of English, University Professor, and Honorary Curator of Special Collections at the University of Virginia since 2009. He formerly held a joint appointment as J. A. Kavanaugh Professor of English at Fordham University and as Fellow and Tutor in English at Campion Hall, Oxford University. He received a D.Phil., M.StJOHN BUCHTEL
John Buchtel is Curator of Rare Books and Head of Special Collections at the Boston Athenaeum . He was previously Head of Special Collections at Georgetown University (2008–2018), and Curator of Rare Books, The Sheridan Libraries, Johns Hopkins University (2004–2007). He served as Curator of Collections at Rare Book Schoolfrom 2001 to 2003.
RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOLRARE BOOK SCHOOLVIRGINIA
Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markings SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally beenPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988KAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. EuropeanNICHOLAS PICKWOAD
Nicholas Pickwoad. Nicholas Pickwoad is a book conservator in private practice. From 1992 to 1995, he was Conservator at the Harvard University Library, before which he was Advisor to the National Trust for Conservation. RARE BOOK SCHOOLNEWSCOURSESADMISSIONS & AWARDSPROGRAMSSUPPORTABOUT RBS Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A. Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam, Program Manager. Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET. Feb. 5. 2021. Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network. Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society ofFellows in
COURSES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOL The Bible and Histories of Reading (22 hours) H-110. The Art & Science of Cartography, 200–1550. H-115. Book Production and Social Practice in Early Modern Europe and America. H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10hours) H-125.
SCHEDULES | RARE BOOK SCHOOLLONDON RARE BOOK SCHOOLRARE BOOK SCHOOLVIRGINIA
Owing to the status of the COVID-19 vaccines, Rare Book School will offer courses only online in 2021. This was a difficult decision to make, but we are dedicated to offering the best educational experience possible for you, our students; in the current circumstances that goal can best be met through virtual classes and community-buildingopportunities.
TEACHING THE HISTORY OF THE BOOK (22 HOURS) “I learned some new ways to present materials to students, but more importantly I learned new ways of looking at materials that will allow me to develop my own classroom activities in the future.” — January 2018 student Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 2–6 August 2021 Format: Online Course fee: $1,000 Aimed at academics and librarians who are PROVENANCE: TRACING OWNERS & COLLECTIONS (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 Users and custodians of historic books are increasingly interested in evidence of former ownership, which helps to elucidate how they were used, read, regarded and circulated. Provenance research includes recognising and deciphering various forms of ownership markings SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally beenPAUL NEEDHAM
Paul Needham became Scheide Librarian at Princeton University in 1998, before which he worked at Sotheby’s and at the Pierpont Morgan Library. Among his books is Twelve Centuries of Bookbinding: 400–1600 (1979). He has given Rare Book School courses on early printed books both at the Morgan and at the Huntington. Courses Formerly Offered Physical Evidence in Early Printed Books (1988KAREN LIMPER-HERZ
Karen Limper-Herz is Lead Curator for Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at the British Library. A student of Mirjam Foot and Jan Storm van Leeuwen, she has worked with and studied bookbindings from different countries and periods for nearly twenty years, and regularly publishes and speaks about bookbindings in the U.K. and abroad. She is the Honorary Secretary and a Vice-PresidentMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. EuropeanNICHOLAS PICKWOAD
Nicholas Pickwoad. Nicholas Pickwoad is a book conservator in private practice. From 1992 to 1995, he was Conservator at the Harvard University Library, before which he was Advisor to the National Trust for Conservation.COURSE SCHEDULE
H-120b. Textual Connected Histories: Books and Reading in the Early Modern European World (10 hours) Roger Chartier John H. Pollack. H-135c. Key Moments in the History of the Book in the Antebellum United States (6 hours) James N. Green Michael Winship. H-165a. Book History, Bibliography, and Humanities Teaching (22 hours) Michael F.Suarez, S.J.
CERTIFICATE PROGRAM
Certificate of Proficiency Proposal (Mac users: Please note that the Mac Preview application will not fill out this form correctly.) 1. Frequently Asked Questions Can the 2021 online courses count toward my certificate? Online courses can be applied toward certificates of proficiency as follows: a combination of three 6-hour courses, two 10-hour courses, one 10-hour course and one 6-hour FACULTY | RARE BOOK SCHOOL Rare Book School Rare Book School University of Virginia P.O. Box 400103 Charlottesville, VA 22904 SUPERHEROES AND SHOCKING AFFAIRS, OR, ADVENTURES IN Superheroes and Shocking Affairs, or, Adventures in Cataloging Popular Literature Brenna Bychowski A 45-minute RBS lecture followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Thursday, 11 June 2020, 7–8 p.m. ET, via Zoom.. Ephemeral popular literature has traditionally been FRAGMENTOLOGY (22 HOURS) Course Length: 22 hours Schedule: 11 a.m.–5 p.m. ET (including breaks), 26–30 July 2021 Format: Online Cost: $1,000 The study of medieval manuscript fragments has developed into its own specialization in recent years, incorporating paleography, codicology, liturgiology, musicology, textual studies, art history, bibliography, provenance, and digital humanities, among other disciplines. In RARE BOOK CATALOGING “Every single day was as useful and relevant as the last. I’m walking away not only a better, ‘sleeker’ cataloger, but an inspired one as well!” — 2017 student Aimed at catalogers who find that their present duties include (or shortly will include) the cataloging of books in their rare materials or special collections and want to be trained in applying Descriptive Cataloging of RACE AND THE BOUNDARIES OF THE BOOK: SEVEN EARLY AMERICAN A 45–minute panel discussion followed by 15 minutes of Q&A held on Tuesday, 20 October 2020, 5–6 p.m. ET, via Zoom. Through video presentations of individual case studies, seven early Americanists zoomed in on a range of bookish artifacts and employed critical bibliography to recover overlooked narratives about race from the historical record. Specifically, they examined how racialized andMIRJAM FOOT
Mirjam Foot is Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London. She is the author of many books and articles on the history of bookbinding, including Studies in the History of Bookbinding (1993); The History of Decorated Bookbinding in England (with Howard Nixon, 1992); and The History of Bookbinding as a Mirror of Society (1998). Courses Formerly Offered B-70. European MICHAEL F. SUAREZ, S.J. Michael F. Suarez, S.J. has served as Director of Rare Book School, Professor of English, University Professor, and Honorary Curator of Special Collections at the University of Virginia since 2009. He formerly held a joint appointment as J. A. Kavanaugh Professor of English at Fordham University and as Fellow and Tutor in English at Campion Hall, Oxford University. He received a D.Phil., M.StJOHN BUCHTEL
John Buchtel is Curator of Rare Books and Head of Special Collections at the Boston Athenaeum . He was previously Head of Special Collections at Georgetown University (2008–2018), and Curator of Rare Books, The Sheridan Libraries, Johns Hopkins University (2004–2007). He served as Curator of Collections at Rare Book Schoolfrom 2001 to 2003.
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RARE BOOK SCHOOL MOVES TO ALL ONLINE OFFERINGS FOR SUMMER 2021 To learn more, click HERE Apply to RBS CoursesFriends of RBS
Course Schedule
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MAR
5
2021
Rare Book School Summer 2021 Q&A Presented by: Laura Perrings, Director of Programs & Laura Eidam,Program Manager
Zoom • 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET*
FEB
5
2021
Fluxus Forms: Author Natilee Harren in Conversation with Elizabeth Eager on Scores, Multiples, and the Eternal Network Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in CriticalBibliography
Zoom • 3:00–4:00 p.m. ET*
NOV
18
2020
Forbidden Knowledge: Author Hannah Marcus in Conversation with Nick Wilding on Medicine, Science, and Censorship in Early Modern Italy Presented by: The Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in CriticalBibliography
Zoom • 3:00–4:00 p.m. ETVIEW Programs »
NEWS
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RBS’S ANDREW W. MELLON SOCIETY OF FELLOWS IN CRITICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY AWARDS SECOND ANNUAL ESSAY PRIZE The Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography at Rare Book School (SoFCB) is delighted to announce the winner of our second annual essay prize: Elizabeth Neswald, “Things that Don’t Talk Much and Things That Feel: Developing a Material Culture Methodology for ‘Black Box’ Medical Devices,” _Nuncius _35 (2020): 632-59. In “Things that Don’t Talk Much and Things That Feel,” Elizabeth Neswald offers an incisive analysis of objects often overlooked by material culture studies. Neswald takes late twentieth-century home diabetes monitors––slim, black, about the size of a credit card and relatively featureless––as her objects of study. Posted 17 days ago by LauraEidam
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RBS GENERAL AND BUICE SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS FOR 2021 ANNOUNCED Rare Book School is pleased to announce the recipients of its General Scholarship Committee awards, as well as the winners of the Buice Scholarships for returning RBS students. Congratulations to these recipients and to the many recipients of Rare Book School’s Access2021 scholarships!
Posted 22 days ago by LauraEidam
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