July 6, “Continued Sense of Wonder”

Tuesday, June 21st, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on July 6, “Continued Sense of Wonder”

JulySenseWonderPlease join the Dunedin Public Libraries’ extended celebration of last year’s symposium theme.  This free evening discussion group gathers at 7 pm to talk about the wonders of children’s literature and fairy tales. There will also be an opportunity for a tour of the City Library’s children’s stacks, full of treasures still enjoyed by children and those young at heart.  Bookings are recommended: phone 474-3690 or email library@dcc.govt.nz.  For more information, contact Jackie McMillan.

CFP for October Symposium, “Book and Place,” 27–28 October

Wednesday, June 15th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on CFP for October Symposium, “Book and Place,” 27–28 October

VesuviusAs usual, the Centre for the Book’s annual symposium will open with a public lecture on Thursday night, followed by a day of stimulating papers. Thursday night’s lecture at the Dunedin Public Library will be given by Neville Peat, author of numerous books about Southern New Zealand (http://www.nevillepeatsnewzealand.com/). Come listen to this well-known author reflect on his sense of book and place as he describes, in words and pictures, some of New Zealand’s most remote and precious areas and landmarks, and his ideas for an autobiography that explores an array of New Zealand islands spanning 8,500 kms of latitude, from the tropical to the frozen.

Friday will consist of panels of 20-min papers, with a plenary lecture by Dr. Ingrid Horrocks of Massey University after morning tea. Ingrid is one of the editors of the forthcoming Victoria University Press title, Extraordinary Anywhere: Essays on Place from Aotearoa New Zealand, as well as an online anthology about a particular place, Pukeahu (http://pukeahuanthology .org/).

We are also delighted that Nicky Page will be joining us. Recently appointed Director to Dunedin’s City of Literature program, Nicky will have lots of thoughts about our topic and will also look forward to hearing the insights of others.

We would welcome papers dealing with this theme from any angle. Possible topics might include:

  • Regionalism in NZ literature Guidebooks
  • Travel writing about NZ Local libraries
  • Movement and traffic of books
  • Printers and/or publishers and place
  • Book events (festivals, auctions, Regent Book Sale)
  • Newspapers and place
  • Book towns (Hay-on-Wye, Wales; Bredevoort, Netherlands; Clunes, Victoria, Australia; Greytown, NZ; and others)
  • Magazine circulation

Abstracts of 250–300 words should be sent to the co-directors of the Centre for the Book, Dr. Donald Kerr (donald.kerr@otago.ac.nz) and Shef Rogers (shef.rogers@otago.ac.nz) before the end of July. Decisions about panels and participants will be confirmed and registration will open in mid-August. We look forward to welcoming you to our fair City of Literature.

If you wish to put up a poster about the event or would like an easily printable copy of the above details, please download the PDF version.

Special Collections Exhibition–Scholarly Favourites

Wednesday, June 15th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Special Collections Exhibition–Scholarly Favourites

Scholarly_Favourites“Scholarly Favourites. Researching in Special Collections” is now open n in the de Beer Gallery, Special Collections, University Library.

Many of the researchers who have nominated titles for this exhibition are also, unsurprisingly, active supporters of the Centre for the Book, so this exhibition has a special resonance for the Centre, besides being a lot of fun.

Please do visit the exhibition area and view the marvellous array of materials that have been used by researchers in Special Collections. Notable items include Albinus’s spectacular Tabulae Sceleti et Musculorum Corporis Humani (1747) with Clara the rhino forming a backdrop; Gregory M. Mathews’s Supplement to The Birds of Norfolk & Lord Howe Islands and the Australasian South Polar Quadrant (1928); Charles Brasch’s copy of Egypt and the Sudan: Handbook for Travellers (1929); Thomas Allom’s China (1843); and a rare leaf of a 14th-c Polish medieval manuscript.

The exhibition runs to 26 August 2016.

Hours: 8.30 am to 5.00 pm, Monday to Friday
De Beer Gallery, Special Collections, 1st floor, University of Otago Library

For further information, please contact Dr Donald Kerr, Special Collections Librarian, University of Otago: phone 03-479-8330; email: Donald.kerr@otago.ac.nz

A Printerly Post

Tuesday, June 7th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on A Printerly Post

Corpus-Hippocrates-header-2For some insights on life as a letterpress printer and a brief history of John Holmes’s engagement with the dark art, see John’s blog post on Barbara Brookes and Sue Wootton’s blog, Corpus.

Philip Temple to deliver Janet Frame Memorial Lecture

Thursday, June 2nd, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Philip Temple to deliver Janet Frame Memorial Lecture

unnamedThe 2016 Janet Frame Memorial Lecture is presented by writer Dr Philip Temple ONZM.

Philip Temple is the President of Honour of the NZ Society of Authors and the author of many fiction and non-fiction titles.

His talk, “Where we were, where we are now,” is a reflection on what has changed – and what has stayed the same – in the life of a professional writer over the last fifty years.

When: 6pm, Thursday 9 June 2016
Where: 4th Floor, City Library, Moray Place
FREE, all welcome but you need to book:

Book by clicking here

 

Margaret Dalziel Lecture, Tuesday 20 September

Monday, May 9th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Margaret Dalziel Lecture, Tuesday 20 September

Bill Sherman, V&A, YorkSave the date.  The Department of English and Linguistics and the Centre for the Book are pleased to welcome Prof. Bill Sherman, Director of Research and Collections, Victoria & Albert Museum, London to deliver this year’s Margaret Dalziel Lecture at 5:30 pm on Tuesday 20 September.  More details will be posted once room and lecture title are confirmed.

Bill Sherman is Head of Research at the Victoria & Albert Museum and Professor of Renaissance Studies at the University of York.  He was Director of the Centre for Renaissance & Early Modern Studies (CREMS) from its creation in 2005 to 2011, and Associate Editor of Shakespeare Quarterly from 2001 to 2012.  He has held visiting positions at Caltech, Queen Mary (University of London) and Keio University (Tokyo), and fellowships at the Folger, Huntington, New York Public Library, National Maritime Museum and Bard Graduate Center.  He has received grants from the NEH, AHRC, Mellon Foundation and Bibliographical Society and has served on a range of boards, trusts and councils on both sides of the Atlantic.

Sherman’s research is driven by a love of archives and other collections, and an interest in how objects from the past (textual and otherwise) come down to us, what they pick up along the way and how they speak across periods. He has published widely on the history of books and readers, the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries, the interface between word and image and the relationship between knowledge and power.

Recent publications include Used Books: Marking Readers in Renaissance England and a special issue of The Huntington Library Quarterly on Prison Writings in Early Modern England (winner of the inaugural Voyager Award of the MLA’s Council of Editors of Learned Journals). His current projects include a study of visual marginalia called The Reader’s Eye, a collection of essays on Renaissance Collage (edited with Juliet Fleming and Adam Smyth), a reconstruction of the art- and book-collections of Walter and Louise Arensberg (with Mark Nelson) and an edition of Marlowe’s The Jew of Malta (edited with Chloe Preedy) for Arden Early Modern Drama.

Melbourne Collaboration Conference, 23 September

Monday, May 9th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Melbourne Collaboration Conference, 23 September

Printed book with marginaliaThe Centre for the Book, Monash University, in collaboration with the Centre for the Book, University of Otago and The State Library of Victoria, are hosting:

Marginal Notes: Social Reading and the Literal Margins.
A One-Day Conference & Masterclass

Keynote Speakers:
Prof. Bill Sherman, Director of Research and Collections, Victoria & Albert Museum, London
Prof. Pat Buckridge, Griffith University, Nathan, Queensland

Conference date: Friday 23 September.

Venue: State Library of Victoria, Melbourne

There are margins to both traditional print- and paper-based texts as well as virtual texts. Whatever text they surround, encompass, define or limit, margins are the spaces in which ideas are contested and debated. Historically, readers have used the physical margin as a space in which to respond to the voice of the author, and to communicate with other readers. As it has become increasingly easy to add marginal notes to virtual texts, and for readers to share their electronic marginalia with each other, scholars are able to scrutinise marginalia in new ways and to reconstruct social reading practices on an unprecedented scale. While contemporary and historical annotation practices have much in common, and there is much to be learned about historical practices from studies of contemporary marginalia, historical practices raise unique and challenging interpretative issues of their own. And, although a range of recent studies have increased our knowledge concerning the distribution and availability of books, the identity and diversity of readers and annotators, the spread and even the nature of literacy in the early modern and modern periods, there remain significant challenges for scholars encountering marginalia.

This conference will investigate marginalia in texts from the early modern period to the present, with a particular focus on the interpretative challenges posed by marginalia in the literal margin—whether encountered directly, via digital surrogate or in mediated form.

Topics may include:

  • Studies of historical marginalia and annotation
  • Theoretical models and methodological protocols for conceptualising marginalia
  • The reproduction of marginalia in virtual environments
  • The location and use of marginalia via digital surrogate
  • Studies of virtual marginalia that shed light on historical practices
  • Changing or limiting contemporary reader practices in virtual environments
  • Marginal notations as “signs of engagement”
  • The nature and interpretative challenges of pictures, doodles, stains and traces etc.
  • Interpretative issues posed by anonymous vs. celebrity marginalia
  • Particular annotators, or particular annotated texts
  • Marginalia as literary work
  • Commentary as writing, writing as commentary
  • Marginalia as (auto)biographical record or life writing
  • Annotation in combination with inter-leaving and grangerising

It is anticipated that the papers from the conference will form the basis of an edited collection to be published by a quality academic press.

Length of papers
Papers will be twenty minutes each (with ten minutes for Q&A).
Please send abstracts of 250–300 words to the convenors by 15 June:

Dr. Patrick Spedding (Patrick.Spedding@monash.edu)
Dr. Paul Tankard (paul.tankard@otago.ac.nz)

To allow for delegates to make their travel plans and/or apply for funding in a timely fashion, proposals will be considered and confirmations issued as they come in.

Masterclass: Prof. Bill Sherman will conduct a masterclass at the State Library of Victoria, using items from the Rare Books Collection to demonstrate some of the interpretative challenges that annotated material presents to scholars and librarians. Seating is limited. For further details, or to book a seat, please contact Dr. Patrick Spedding (Monash University): Patrick.Spedding@monash.edu.

Call for Papers for November BSANZ Conference

Tuesday, April 5th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on Call for Papers for November BSANZ Conference

Image of bridges of Hamilton, NZWaikato University in Hamilton, New Zealand is the venue for the annual Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand conference, 21-23 November 2016. There has been a call for papers and the below are just some of the potential topics/themes given in the attached pdf. Please consider this great opportunity to mix and mingle with print culture folk in the River City; and please spread the word.

The conference organisers invite proposals particularly linked to the topics below, although papers on any matters of bibliographical interest, traditional and contemporary, are also welcome:

  • Local and regional printers and publishers and their networks
  • Specialty and independent bookstores – their history and the communities they serve
  • Local and regional press – newspapers, newsletters, periodicals, almanacs
  • Print and online publications and ephemera of counter-culture, grassroots and activist movements
  • Authors and illustrators
  • Indigenous printing and indigenous languages in print …. (see attached for more)

Kathryn Parsons is the contact person for all enquiries and submissions: kparsons@waikato.ac.nz

The deadline for submissions is Friday 19 May, 2016.

A Sense of Wonder–New DPL Reading Group Forming

Sunday, March 27th, 2016 | Shef Rogers | Comments Off on A Sense of Wonder–New DPL Reading Group Forming

Poster for reading groupAN ADULT CONVERSATION ABOUT CHILDREN’S LITERATURE

Following the keen interest in children’s literature highlighted by last year’s Centre for the Book symposium, you are invited to join us for a discussion on the joy of reading stories for the young, or young at heart.

Bring along an old favourite or a new discovery to share.

BOOKINGS: 474 3690 or library@dcc.govt.nz
CONTACT: jackie.mcmillan@dcc.govt.nz
Wednesday 13 April | 7.00pm 4th Floor | City Library