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Teaching Text Technologies and Critical Bibliography Among the Disciplines: Objects of Study [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 368 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 840 g, 2 Line drawings, black and white; 48 Halftones, black and white; 50 Illustrations, color
  • Serija: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032856343
  • ISBN-13: 9781032856346
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 368 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 840 g, 2 Line drawings, black and white; 48 Halftones, black and white; 50 Illustrations, color
  • Serija: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2025
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032856343
  • ISBN-13: 9781032856346
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"Teaching Text Technologies and Critical Bibliography Among the Disciplines: Objects of Study is a richly illustrated volume consisting of 23 methods-based chapters discussing innovative and often experimental approaches to hands-on teaching with material texts. Featuring 47 contributors whose work ranges from digital humanities, librarianship, curation, and conservation to architecture, culinary history, fine art, literary history, and the history of science, the collection builds on new work in the areas of text technologies and critical bibliography-emerging scholarly approaches being embraced in the humanities. The book features established experts in bibliography, the history of the book, manuscript studies, and textual editing, as well as educatorsand students who are applying new critical bibliographical methods (e.g., Black bibliography) to their pedagogy. The result is a dynamic cross-disciplinary, cross-generational exchange modeling inclusive pedagogies with textual artifacts, and illuminating how object-oriented teaching can harness the insights of diverse branches of practice and learning"-- Provided by publisher.

Teaching Text Technologies and Critical Bibliography Among the Disciplines: Objects of Study is a richly illustrated volume consisting of 23 methods-based chapters discussing innovative and often experimental approaches to hands-on teaching with material texts. Featuring 47 contributors whose work ranges from digital humanities, librarianship, curation, and conservation to architecture, culinary history, fine art, literary history, and the history of science, the collection builds on new work in the areas of text technologies and critical bibliography—emerging scholarly approaches being embraced in the humanities. The book features established experts in bibliography, the history of the book, manuscript studies, and textual editing, as well as educators and students who are applying new critical bibliographical methods (e.g., Black bibliography) to their pedagogy. The result is a dynamic cross-disciplinary, cross-generational exchange modeling inclusive pedagogies with textual artifacts and illuminating how object-oriented teaching can harness the insights of diverse branches of practice and learning.



Teaching Text Technologies and Critical Bibliography Among the Disciplines: Objects of Study is a richly illustrated volume discussing innovative and experimental approaches to hands-on teaching with material texts.

Recenzijos

"Objects of Study showcases a wonderful explosion of innovative pedagogy and research focused on studying texts as material objects. This well-illustrated volume was developed out of a 2017 conference supported by Rare Book School and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to expand the purview of bibliography beyond the well-known canon. The 47 contributors model and illustrate inclusiveness and collaboration in sharing their experiences of teaching and practicing the study of books and book history across an exciting range of times, places, and techniques of text-making."

Ann Blair, Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor, Harvard University

Of making many books there is no end, the Bible informs us. Rare Book School at the University of Virginia attests to that enduring truth. No educational institution has done more to foster teaching and scholarship about books as material texts embedded in cultural history. . . . Objects of Study offers at once an introduction to the challenges and joys in this field of inquiry and fascinating lessons for the practitioner about how to teach this important and varied subject matter to others.

Robert A. Gross, author of The Minutemen and Their World

"Like all books, this book isliterallya gathering. More than most, it is an intersectional gathering, bringing together not only disciplines but also objects, places, and people, all bound by a common interest in the material conditions of meaning and making. It is (to borrow the locution of the opening chapter) great stuff."

Matthew Kirschenbaum, Distinguished University Professor and Co-Founder, BookLab, University of Maryland

"The book is surely the most humane prosthetic device ever devised by advanced human societies. So reading this wonderful collection is both an uplifting and humbling experience. Here is a widely ranging set of essays by a learned company of scholars and educators whose meticulous care for books is an index of their greater care, for the people who produce and maintain and use them. Generosity is the leit motiv for what these admirable people do, stories of human beings at their working and caring best."

Jerome McGann, Emeritus University Professor, University of Virginia

"This wide-ranging collection offers timely and practical pedagogical ideas that will be of immediate use not only in book history courses but in almost any literature or history course that could usefully incorporate hands-on making or analysis of books. . . . whether at a research university or a community college, its incorporation of other languages, of non-Western materials, and of genres ranging from cookbooks to devotional texts will make it of interest to instructors across a variety of fields."

Leah Price, Director of the Rutgers Initiative for the Book and Henry Rutgers Distinguished Professor of English

List of Contributors

Foreword

Michael F. Suarez, S.J.

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Barbara Heritage and Donna A. C. Sy

Part 1: Some Reflections on Pedagogical Practices with Material Texts: Past
to Present

1. Stuff: An Overview

Terry Belanger

2. Teaching Bibliography with Original Printed Things

David L. Vander Meulen

3. Reflections on Teaching the History of Bookbinding

Jan Storm van Leeuwen

4. Research Locally, Think Historically: Incorporating Material Texts into
the Undergraduate History Methods Classroom

Elizabeth Yale

Part 2: Hybrid Methods & Frameworks for Introducing Bibliography to New
Audiences

5. Stealth Bibliography: Or, How to Teach Material Texts in Any College Class


Claire J. C. Eager

6. A Rare Opportunity in a Language Class: Bridging Object-Oriented and
Second Language Pedagogy

Rachel Stein

7. The Ghost of Blithfield Hall: A Paleographical and Pedagogical Puzzle

Julie A. Fisher, Sara F. Powell, and Heather Wolfe

Part 3: Inclusive Instruction with Textual Artifacts

8. Rare Books, Beyond the Bronx: On Tour with the CUNY Rare Book Scholars

Olivia Loksing Moy, with Eric Holzenberg, Mark Samuels Lasner, and Heather
Weintraub

9. The Ephemeral Langston Hughes

Laura E. Helton, Theresa Hessey, and Curtis Small, Jr.

10. Yak Brains, Poisonous Trees, and the Eyes of the Goddess: Himalayan
Bookmaking between Worlds

Amy Holmes-Tagchungdarpa

Part 4: Books in the Community: Broader Publics & Outreach

11. Farm to Book: Intellectual Terroir, Civic Humanities, and the Craft of
the Book

Tilke Elkins, Vera Keller, and Marilyn Mohr

12. Teaching Bibliography with Cookbooks in the Continuing Education Setting

Sarah Peters Kernan

13. AB to Z: Artists Books and Zines, Special Collections Library
Instruction, and Community Engagement

Diane Dias De Fazio, Emily Martin, and Jay Sylvestre

14. Austen in Public

Juliette Wells

Part 5: Tools & Approaches for Bibliographical Analysis

15. Materials to Work Withal: Practical Bibliography as a Pedagogical
Model

Cait Coker and Todd Samuelson

16. Teaching Collational Format with VisColl

Alberto Campagnolo and Dot Porter

17. A Potions Lesson: Experiential Learning and the Historical Turn

Alex Hidalgo

Part 6: Project-Based Learning with Special Collections

18. Hiding in Plain Sight: The UCSB-Howard Collaboration and the Ballitore
Collection

Cecily A. Duffie, Rachael Scarborough King, Danielle Knox, and John Henry
Merritt

19. Crossing BordersFrom Slavery to Abolition (16701875): A Collaborative
Student Exhibit at the Haverford College Libraries

Sarah M. Horowitz and Sarah Watson

20. Reading Handwriting: Building Tools for Undergraduates in Liberal Arts
Schools

Carlson C. Given, Christopher Hager, Emma C. Sternberg, Eric C. Stoykovich,
and Hilary E. Wyss

Part 7: Objects of Study: Forms of Text, Forms of Knowing

21. Bibliographical Architectures

Kyle Dugdale

22. Pace, Scale, Touch: On Artists Books as Learning Experiences

Matthew P. Brown, Katharine Lark DeLamater, and Andrew David King

23. Teaching with Sacred Texts: Spiritual Practice as a Form of Knowledge

Barbara Heritage and Ruth-Ellen St. Onge

Afterword

Alexia Hudson-Ward

Works Cited

Index
Barbara Heritage is the Miranker Family Director of Collections, Exhibitions & Scholarly Initiatives at Rare Book School at the University of Virginia.

Donna A. C. Sy is a past Administrative Director of the Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliographya program that she created with Barbara Heritage and Michael F. Suarez, S.J.