
Course Description (Formerly numbered 261.) Lecture, four hours. The book as a physical object and its relationship to transmission of the text. History and methods of analytical bibliography, with particular emphasis on handpress books. Printing processes as related to bibliography and librarianship. Discussions, demonstrations, and experiments in design, composition, and presswork. Letter grading.
Course Objectives
My vision for graduate students taking this course, is that upon graduation they become successful bibliographers in a special collection located in an academic library, working with a profitable bookseller, or in a special library.The goal of this course is to prepare students for such positions. Hence, the purpose of this course is:
1) to introduce students to the forensic principles of analytical (i.e.,
descriptive or critical) bibliography; and
2) to provide them with several pedagogical opportunities to describe analytically as well as classify the various components of printed codex books between 1454 (October) and 1900 (approximately).
Teaching Method:
To prepare students for such work environments, I will use a combination of methods:
- Lectures--The instructor will present a brief history of each component of the codex, introduce specialized technical vocabulary, and the detailed procedures for describing these components.
- Curatorships--Students should begin by selecting a collecting area of interest, represented by several books. Ideally, the area selected should have a printed bibliography available. The second or middle book can be worked on together with another student.
- Please leave your books on hold at Special Collections. See due dates on the class schedule.
- Laboratory-Seminars--In advance of the lab-seminar sessions, each student will prepare an outline based on the assigned readings and lead the discussion. Seminar leaders may wish to schedule class meetings in Special Collections and/or identify exemplars along with handouts and/or special bibliographies.
- Readings--In order to increase their formal knowledge of the field, students are encouraged to read and take notes on at least three titles from each unit in addition to the required texts.
- Mid-term and Final Examination--Two quizzes will examine your understanding of the various techniques in analytical bibliography.
- Special Problems--From time to time, special problem books (or portions thereof) may be assigned and/or discussed in the lab-seminar sessions.
Grading Much of your grade will be based on the increase in demonstrated knowledge from a specific baseline, i.e., the first book.
- 45%--Based on your first and last analytical descriptions.
- 10%--Based on your second description (which can be done in consultation with a colleague).
- 30%--Based on your mid-term examination and your final examination (i.e., 15% each).
- 15%--Based on leading the class discussions during your selected seminar session.
Grades will be reported to the UCLA Registrar using My UCLA .
Course Schedule
Class Dates |
Topics to be covered ( UserName and Password required for first link to Power Point lecture slides within each topic) |
Assignments |
September 30 |
Introduction and Orientation; History of the Discipline |
|
October 7 |
Quasi-Facsimile Title Page Transcriptions |
Book One Due |
October 14 |
Fold Collations |
QF TP Seminar |
October 21 |
Page Collations and Arabic Numbers; Bowers
on Difficult Page Collations;
|
Fold Coll. Seminar |
October 28 |
Typographical Descriptions ; Unicode Issues
|
Page Seminar; First Quiz |
November 4 |
Paper Descriptions and Watermarks ( Sidney Berger ) |
Type Seminar; Second Book Due |
November 11 |
UNIVERSITY HOLIDAY |
|
November 18 |
Binding Descriptions; Illustrations (Daniel J. Slive); Editions and Description of Printing Ink |
Paper and Bindings Seminar |
November 25 |
Auctions and Catalogs; Descriptive Notes and Exhibition Catalogs ( Bruce Whiteman ) |
|
December 2 |
Facsimiles, Forgeries, and Fraud ; The Future of Analytical Bibliography |
Final Quiz; Book One Due on Friday |
Some Quotes to Consider about Analytical
Bibliography
"has nothing to with the subject matter of books, but only with their formal aspect."
--W.W. Greg
"beyond the surface level of simple enumerative bibliography."
--Roy Stokes
"Bibliography falls into two distinct and well recognized classes:
the enumeration and classification of books and
the comparative and historical study of their make-up."
--Bestermann
Library Abbreviations
Call numbers have been provided for nearly every title on the syllabus. The only exception are last minute additions. For those titles that possess call numbers, the following abbreviations mean:
- ART Art Library, UCLA (including Belt Collection)
- BioM Biomedical Library, UCLA
- CHEM Chemistry Library, UCLA
- Clark William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
- College College Library, Powell Library Building
- DIS DIS Laboratory Collection
- Manage Anderson Graduate School of Management
- SC Special Collections Department, YRL
- NIC Not in Collection (noted for your future edification)
Professional Tools for the Analytical Bibliographer To describe successfully the books that they encounter, students of analytical bibliography will find it necessary to own some professional tools. The requisite minimum are listed under "basic"; however, students may wish to investigate adding to their tool box the additional items under "intermediate" or "advanced". The final category requires institutional support; however, any strong Department of Special Collections should have access to these tools. All quoted prices are approximate. Basic :
- 1. Transparent hairline, fine-line millimeter ruler, or optician's steel/brass rule ($1-5). Available in Special Collections/Clark Library
- 2. Magnifying glass; preferably 6-10 X type loupe or type finder ($15.00 student model; $65 professional version).
Intermediate :
- 3. Millimeter micrometer ($15.00 student model; $35 professional model). Available in Special Collections/Clark Library
- 4. Vernier calipers ($20.00 student model; $110 professional model).
- 5. Pocket microscope; preferably 20-60X ($10 student model; $130 for professional model).
- 6. Fiber Optic Illuminator, Variable Intensity (Low, medium, and high). (Model 190, Dolan-Jenner Industries Inc.). Available in Clark Library
Advanced :
- 7. Long-wave (320-380 NM) ultra-violet box, also known as UV, or blacklight or Wood's light ($180) Available in Special Collections/Clark Library (purchase: GIA, 1660 Stewart Street, Santa Monica). AVOID short-wave (180-280nm) blacklight--germicidal. In any event, avoid prolonged use (15-20 minutes) or if under any medication, notably antibiotics, which increase skin sensitivity. In prolonged use, special goggles are required.
- 8. Ph strips/measuring kit ($10.00) Available in Clark Library
- 9. Macro-photography equipment.
- 10. Cycloptic microscope; preferably 7-25X, with stand and microphotography equipment attachment ($500.00).
- 11. Infra-red lamp and/or IR photographic equipment ($1000).
Institutional support :
- 12. Hinman collator ($5000); available, Clark Library only.
- 13. (Randall) McLeod Portable Collator; (mcleod@credit.erin.utoronto.ca)
- 14. Spectrophotometric equipment.
- 15. Scanning Auger Microscopy Dating (SAMD); Rod McNeil, Environmental Technologies.
- 16. X-ray inspection (electron radiography, nuclear activation analysis; proton-induced x-ray emission, PIXE; or cyclotron).
Additional information on this subject may be obtained by reading Paul Koda's "Scientific Equipment for the Examination of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Documents," Library Trends 36 (Summer 1987): 39-52. Besides ASUCLA, potential sources for some of the above include Harbour Freight Salvage (1-800-423-2567); Edmund Scientific Company, 101 E. Gloucester Pike, Barrington, NJ 08007; and Service Engravers, 7 West 22nd Street, NYC 10010.
Required Textbooks
Fredson Bowers, Principles of Bibliographical Description. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1949; reprint ed., New York: Russell & Russell, 1962; reprint ed., Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1986; Winchester, England: St. Paul's Bibliographies, 1986; New Castle, Del. : Oak Knoll Press, 1994 with Introduction by G. Thomas Tanselle. (required text) YRL Z1001 .B67p 1986 and Clark Library Reference Z1001.B78p 1994 (Cat. Office)
Philip Gaskell, A New Introduction to Bibliography. New York: Oxford University Press, 2nd corrected impression, 1974 or later. (required text) Clark/BioM/YRL Ref. Z 116 A2G18 1974; Especially pages 311-360.
Some Interesting and Useful Links
We have a course listserv. You can join by doing the following:
To subscribe to the list, send a message to "requests@lists.gseis.ucla.edu". In the body of the message, type
"subscribe is-237 your name" where your name is, literally, your name (NOT an email address). For example, "subscribe is-237 Lee Bruin" Otherwise, the major e-discussion groups are:
BIBSOCCAN
: http://www.library.utoronto.ca/bsc/
Book_Arts-L
:http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/bookarts/
SHARP-L : http://www.sharpweb.org/sharp-l.html
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last revision, 30 January 2008
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