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~ News from the Rare Books Department of Special Collections at the J. Willard Marriott Library, The University of Utah

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Category Archives: Uncategorized

Book of the Week – Primitive Origination of Mankind Considered and Examined According to the Light of Nature…

07 Monday Jul 2014

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London, Matthew Hale, William Godbid, William Shrowsbery

Hale, Primitive Origination…,1677, Title Page
Hale, Primitive Origination…,1677, Note
Hale, Primitive Origination…,1677, Section IV

Primitive Origination of Mankind Considered and Examined According to the Light of Nature…
Sir Matthew Hale (1609-1676)
London: Printed for William Godbid, for William Shrowsbery at the Sign of the Bible in Duke-Lane, 1677
First edition

Published after Sir Hale’s death, this curious treatise attempts to prove that the world must have had a beginning else mankind could never have existed from eternity.

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You are invited – Exhibit and Reception

30 Wednesday Apr 2014

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accordion, Allied Occupation, Catherine Tierney, Chinese, furigana, Japan, Katherine W. Dumke Fine Arts and Architecture Library, Lennox Tierney, manuscript, Marriott Library, orihon, Rare Books Division, Special Collections

PicturingPast

Sponsored by the Katherine W. Dumke Fine Arts and Architecture Library, Picturing the Past: Exploring Past Images of Japan with Professor Lennox Tierney features photographs taken by Professor Emeritus Lennox Tierney while he was stationed in Japan during the Allied Occupation after World War II, and on frequent return visits over the next sixty years. The Lennox and Catherine Tierney Photograph Collection, comprised of more than 500,000 slides and prints, was donated to the Marriott Library’s Special Collections Department.

Thursday, May 15
4:30-6PM
Marriott Library, Level 1

For more information about the collection, please see:
http://www.lib.utah.edu/collections/Professor-Lennox-Tierney-project.php

See also:
Guide to the Lennox Tierney interviews audio-visual collection 1994-1997

and
Inventory of the Lennox Tierney papers 1911-2010

The Rare Books Division holds many books donated by Professor Tierney.

Kumaraju yaku
Japan: publisher not identified, approximately 1760
BQ1993 C5 K86 1760

Manuscript text in Chinese, with Japanese furigana, folded accordion style (orihon). University of Utah copy from the library of Lennox Tierney.


Kumaraju yaku
Shimane-gun: Matsuo Jokyu, Horeki 13, (1764)
BQ2053 J3 K86 1764

Manuscript text in Chinese, folded accordion style (orihon). University of Utah copy from the library of Lennox Tierney.


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Rare Books in Outside Online

19 Wednesday Feb 2014

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America, Astoria, HarperCollins, John Jacob Astor, Northwest, Outside Online, Overland Party, Peter Stark, rare books, Thomas Jefferson, Washington Irving

An image from our first edition copy of Washington Irving’s Astoria (1836) was used for an Outside Online post: An excerpt from a new book about the legendary Overland Party attempts to establish America’s first commercial colony on the wild and unclaimed Northwest coast. The book, Astoria: John Jacob Astor and Thomas Jefferson’s Lost Pacific Empire, a Story of Wealth, Ambition, and Survival  by Peter Stark was released this month from HarperCollins. The image was also used in the book.

http://www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-adventure/exploration/Astoria-John-Jacob-Astor-and-Thomas-Jefferson.html

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Call for Entries – Artists’ Book Cornucopia

07 Tuesday Jan 2014

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Abecedarian Gallery, Artists' Book Cornucopia, J. Willard Marriott Library, Luise Poulton, rare books, Special Collections

Artists’ Book Cornucopia is an annual juried exhibition held at Abecedarian Gallery each spring. The exhibition is open to any form of artists’ publication with the exception of self-published on-demand bookworks.

Regardless of the juror’s decision, all submissions are reviewed by gallery staff with an eye towards inclusion in future curated and invitational exhibitions.

A printable version of these guidelines can be downloaded as a PDF here.

For more information and to apply visit abecedarian gallery’s website.

Entries will be juried by Luise Poulton, Managing Curator, Rare Books, Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah. Up to $1500 in purchase and exhibition awards will be awarded at gallery director’s discretion.

First prize is a solo show in Abecedarian Gallery’s Reading Room Spring 2015.

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Rare Books Welcomes CBAA

10 Tuesday Sep 2013

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artists' books, Book Arts Program, CBAA, College Book Arts Association, J. Willard Marriott Library, Luise Poulton, rare books, Rare Books Division, Salt Lake City

The Book Arts Program at the J. Willard Marriott Library hosts the 2014 College Book Arts Association meeting with Print, Produce, Publish in January 2014.

The conference features a variety of events including member’s exhibition, invited speakers, panel presentations, studio demonstrations, roundtable discussions, vendor’s fair, Salt Lake City area tours, local exhibitions, student member portfolio reviews, members’ showcase, auction and Cornered – a folded-form exchange.

As part of the conference, the Rare Books Division offers two hands-on sessions of forty artists’ books selected from the rare book collections by Luise Poulton, on Thursday, January 2.

On Friday, January 3, Luise moderates the panel discussion, “Artists’ Book Collections and the Classroom.”

For more information and to register, please go to the conference webpage.

See you there!

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Recommended Lecture — In the Workshop of the Mind

05 Thursday Sep 2013

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Ann Blair, collaboration, Department of History, France, Harvard University, history of the book, O. Meredith Wilson Lecture in History, University of Utah

The Department of History, University of Utah, hosts the O. Meredith Wilson Lecture in History on Thursday, September 19, 2013.

Harvard University professor Ann Blair is the guest lecturer. Dr. Blair’s specialty is early modern France, early modern European intellectual and cultural history; the history of the book, and the history of science. The title of her lecture is, “In the Workshop of the Mind: Methods of Collaboration in Early Modern Europe.”

Dr. Blair writes,  “Today we are well aware of the collaborative nature of intellectual work: the majority of scientific papers are co-authored; in the humanities interdisciplinary initiatives and digital methods of research have all encouraged collaboration. We generally have the sense that collaborative work is a recent development, that in the past scholarship was a solitary activity. Indeed in paintings and descriptions of the early modern period scholars were typically depicted working alone, but the working papers and letters that survive tell a different story. Through these sources we can appreciate how early moderns worked collaboratively through correspondence and in person, with peers, with patrons, and with helpers (amanuenses, students, family members). Collaborations worked differently in early modern Europe, and with different conceptions of credit and authority from ours today, but in this talk illustrated from early modern paintings, manuscripts, and printed books I will argue that collaboration was even more widespread and essential to scholarship than it is today.”

When: Thursday, September 19, 2013, 4:00PM

Where: Eccles Auditorium, Room 109, Carolyn Tanner Irish Humanities Building (CTIHB), University of Utah

History logo

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Book of the Week – Elementa Geometriae

04 Wednesday Sep 2013

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Abelard of Bath, Arabic, Campanus of Novara, Erhardt Ratdolt, Euclid, geometry, Greek, initial, littera moderna, printing, rotunda, Venice, woodblock, woodcut

Euclid, Elementa Geometriae, First, 1482
Euclid, Elementa Geometriae, Arc, 1482
Euclid, Elementa Geometriae, Triangle, 1482

Elementa Geometriae
Euclid
Venice, Erhardt Ratdolt, 1482
QA31 E86 E5 1482

This is the editio princeps, or first printed edition, of Euclid’s Elements of Geometry, the oldest mathematical textbook still in common use today. The Greek mathematician Euclid compiled the work around 300 BC. Its success can be attributed to its simple structure where each theorum follows logically from its predecessor.

In 1482, Erhardt Ratdolt, famous for his beautifully produced scientific books, printed eight works – Euclid’s Elements among them. Ratdolt’s fame largely rests upon this edition of Elements. It is the first printed book to contain geometrical figures. An elegant three-sided woodblock and a white-vine style woodcut initial, several hundred small ornamental capitals, and more than four hundred and twenty carefully designed and perfectly printed marginal diagrams, confirm its standing as a landmark publication.

The page layout, particularly the first page, is an outstanding example of Ratdolt’s consideration of the overall look and readability of his work. Note the closeness of the type to the initial and the close set of the text page. For the text, Ratdolt used a type called “rotunda” or “round-text.” The Italian writing-masters called this littera moderna.

Ratdolt’s book was based on the standard Euclid of the later Middle ages: Abelard of Bath’s twelfth-century translation from the Arabic, revised in the following century by Campanus of Novara (d. 1296). In his dedication to this edition, Ratdolt suggested that the scarcity of printed mathematical works was due to the problems involved in printing the geometrical diagrams.  He then happily announced that he had discovered a method of printing them as easily as the text. He did not elaborate upon this method, but it most likely involved the use of type-metal rule arrangements that could be printed along with the text.

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Reader Response

27 Tuesday Aug 2013

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Dara Niketic

enhanced-buzz-19599-1377193064-26Thanks to one of our faithful followers, Dara Niketic.

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Congratulations, Alesia!

13 Tuesday Aug 2013

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Ghana, Peace Corps, Rare Books Division

Congratulations to Alesia, who, on Friday, received her official invitation to serve as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ghana from February 2014 to April 2016. She will be working as a Health Educator in Ghana’s Health Program. Some of her primary duties will include: facilitating the process to bring clean water and sanitation facilities to communities, as well as promoting and improving existing facilities; increasing food security in Ghana through improving nutrition and food utilization in rural communities; teaching on topics such as hygiene, sexual reproductive health and family planning, HIV/AIDS, malaria, and diarrhea disease in schools, communities, or other settings; serving as an advocate for her adopted Ghanaian  community for needed resources; and participating in a variety of other projects. Alesia graduated this past spring with a BS in Anthropology and  a minor in International Studies;  and an Honors BS in Biology with an emphasis in Cell and Molecular Biology and a minor in Chemistry. She has worked in the Rare Books Division since September 2009, the longest, by far, she says, that she has ever stayed with one job. Which means, of course, that she will miss us as much as we will miss her. She just doesn’t know it yet.

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Watch Rare Books at TEDxUGA

20 Thursday Jun 2013

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In March, Dr. Belinda Stallion Southard presented at TEDxUGA. She included he image “Philadelphia Hall Burning” from History of Pennsylvania Hall, Philadelphia, 1838, first edition. You can now watch Dr. Stallion’s talk, Change the Language, Change the Beliefs. See our March 21 post for more information about the image and its journey to TEDxUGA.

Philadelphia Hall Burning, 1838

Philadelphia Hall Burning, 1838

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