Book of the Week – An Imperfect Solution

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An Imperfect Solution
D’Ambrosio
Phoenix, AZ: Studio D’Ambrosio, c1997
N7433,4 D34 I46 1997

Poem printed on nine mounted pages. A miniature book presented in five boxes bound in a series between two covers with linking text. The boxes contain objects such as sea shells, pearls, turquoise, silver, dried flowers, silk flowers, exotic papers, cast paper back lit with a light bulb and replaceable battery and red coral. Edition of fifty copies. University of Utah copy is no. 47.

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Recommended Lecture — Voicing Cultural Change

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lecture imageThe Obert C. & Grace A. Tanner Humanities Center presents: 

Voicing Cultural Change: A Renaissance Songwriter’s Move from Performance to the Printed Book

by Professor Maria Dobozy, Dept. of Languages and Literature

Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Noon-1:30

The Jewel Box, Room 143
Carolyn Tanner Irish Humanities Building
University of Utah

This lecture forms a chapter in a book-length project evaluating the Hungarian poet Sebastian Tinodi (c. 1510-1556). Tinodi is unique in Hungarian literary history because his are the earliest extant secular songs composed with melodies. He chronicled the war between Ottoman, Hungarian, and Hapsburg forces. Dr. Dobozy examines artistic production in Tinodi’s multi-ethnic, multi-lingual setting; discerning typical traditional elements in Hungarian songs of the period; and finding evidence of the cultural exchange between Germany and Hungary in print and book production, poetic and musical composition, and musical performance.

For more information, please contact:
The Tanner Humanities Center
801-585-7989

www.thc.utah.edu

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Recommended Lecture — Shared Tradition

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The Jewish Studies Program at the University of Utah proudly presents

PROFESSOR VIVIAN MANN

Director of the Master’s Program in Jewish Art at the Graduate School of
the Jewish Theological Seminary and Curator of the Jewish Museum in New York

A SHARED TRADITION:  THE ISLAMIC ART OF MUSLIMS AND JEWS

Thursday, October 24, 2013
4:00pm
Spencer F. Eccles Business Building
Room 1180
University of Utah

Until recently, Islamic lands were multicultural societies that included large Jewish and Christian minorities, so that works made by and for non-Muslims can appropriately be studied together with art made for followers of Islam. In various periods, for example, Qur’ans and Hebrew Bibles shared the same system of decoration, and Jews were the primary silver and goldsmiths of Muslim countries. The cross-cultural nature of Islamic art resulted in a rich flowering during the medieval and early modern periods.

Dr. Vivian Mann served as the Morris and Eva Feld Chair of Judaica at The Jewish Museum, where she curated numerous exhibitions and accompanying catalogs, among them Gardens and Ghettos: The Art of Jewish Life in Italy; Convivencia: Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Medieval Spain; and Morocco: Jews and Art in a Muslim Land. In 2010, Dr. Mann curated Uneasy Communion: Jews, Christians, and Altarpieces in Medieval Spain for the Museum of Biblical Art (MOBIA). She is the author of Jewish Texts on the Visual Arts, Cambridge University Press, 2000; and Art and Ceremony in Jewish Life: Essays in the History of Jewish Art, Pindar Press, 2005.

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Book of the Week – Harmonia Macrocosmica

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Harmonia Macrocosmica
Andreas Cellarius
Amsterdam: Jansson, 1661
Second edition
QB41 C39

The Celestial Atlas of Harmony was published in varying formats in 1660, 1661, 1666, and 1708.  Very few copies of the first edition of 1660 survive.  (One known copy is held by the British Museum). The Harmonia Macrocosmica, a summary of pre-Newtonian astronomy, compares the various cosmological theories up to and of that time, including those of Ptolemy, Tycho Brahe, and Copernicus.

The geocentric theories of Ptolemy, suggesting that the earth is the center of the universe, are contrasted with those of Copernicus, who put the sun at the center of our solar system. Tycho Brahe’s theory attempted to unify the two. Brahe’s version shows the sun revolving around the earth and the rest of the planets revolving around the sun.

The book also has sections on the Earth’s climate zones, the sizes of the sun, moon, and planets, and the constellations of the zodiac. It is this broad overview of astronomical thought that kept the book from being banned under strictures put in place by Pope Paul V in 1616. These same strictures put Galileo under house arrest for the rest of his life after the printing of his Dialogo (1632), which was based on Copernican theory.

Andreas Cellarius was the rector of a college in the northern Netherlands. The printer, Jan Jansson, was one of the preeminent publishers of his time. Both art and science were applied to this production, with discoveries heralded by imaginative images as well as observed fact. Cheerful cherubs, floating over head earnest astronomers hold transits and compasses. The first edition was extremely popular, prompting the second edition.

The second edition of the atlas contains twenty-nine lavishly designed and hand-colored engraved plates, some of the finest examples of seventeenth-century Dutch cartography in existence. The technique of engraving began in ancient times as a way to decorate objects, particularly of metal. After the development of the printing press in Europe in 1450, engraving became a way to create high quality illustrations which retained precise detail, even after multiple impressions. Specialized tools, known as “burins” and “gravers” of various sizes and shapes were used to cut away the surface of a metal plate. The 1708 reissue bears the engraved names of Gerald Valk and Pieter Schenck on each plate, although not one line had been changed.

View more images at the J. Willard Marriott Library Digital Library

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Salt Lake Tribune – University of Utah class studies the Book of Mormon as literature

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University of Utah students visit Rare Books to view and study early Mormon literature and contemporary material.

University of Utah class studies the Book of Mormon as literature

“‘The idea is, in a book way, to set the scene,’ said Luise Poulton, managing curator of the library’s rare books.”

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Recommended Reading — The Pulpit and the Press in Reformation

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Michelson, The Pulpit and the Press in Reformation Italy, 2013

The Pulpit and the Press in Reformation Italy
Emily Michelson
Cambridge, Massachusetts; London, England: Harvard University Press, 2013
BR390 M53 2013

 

For more information, go to:

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674072978&content=book

“Italian preachers during the Reformation era found themselves in the trenches of a more desperate war than anything they had ever imagined. This war—the splintering of western Christendom into conflicting sects—was physically but also spiritually violent. In an era of tremendous religious convolution, fluidity, and danger, preachers of all kinds spoke from the pulpit daily, weekly, or seasonally to confront the hottest controversies of their time. Preachers also turned to the printing press in unprecedented numbers to spread their messages.

Emily Michelson challenges the stereotype that Protestants succeeded in converting Catholics through superior preaching and printing. Catholic preachers were not simply reactionary and uncreative mouthpieces of a monolithic church. Rather, they deftly and imaginatively grappled with the question of how to preserve the orthodoxy of their flock and maintain the authority of the Roman church while also confronting new, undeniable lay demands for inclusion and participation.

These sermons—almost unknown in English until now—tell a new story of the Reformation that credits preachers with keeping Italy Catholic when the region’s religious future seemed uncertain, and with fashioning the post-Reformation Catholicism that thrived into the modern era. By deploying the pulpit, pen, and printing press, preachers in Italy created a new religious culture that would survive in an unprecedented atmosphere of competition and religious choice.”

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Book of the Week – A Letter of Columbus

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A Letter of Columbus
David Citino
Ohio State University: Logan Elm Press, 1990

Poem adapted from the letter Christopher Columbus wrote to Ferdinand and Isabella on February 15, 1493, as he was returning to Spain from his first voyage to the “New World.” Illustrated with monoprints by Anthony Rice. Issued in paper-covered slipcase with inlaid cast paper bas-relief. Edition of one hundred and thirty signed and numbered copied. University of Utah copy is no. 11.

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Daily Utah Chronicle – U library collection highlights banned literature

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Daily Utah Chronicle reporter Stephen Willis talks to Rare Books curator Alison Conner about rare books for Banned Book Week.

U library collection highlights banned literature

‘The history of banned books is nearly as old as the history of written language, said Alison Conner, a rare books curator in Special Collections at the Marriott Library.’

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Book of the Week – Mesmer: Secrets of the Human Frame

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Mesmer: Secrets of the Human Frame
Toni Dove
New York: Granary Books, 1993
N7433.4 D675 M4 1993

Texts by Freud and others. First mounted as a computerized slide and sound installation in the Brooklyn Bridge Anchorage in 1990. Presented as a radio piece in the 1991 New American radio series, then as an essay in the summer of 1992 edition of the n.y.u. drama journal. Using transparent and opaque metallic papers (including a three-dimensional centerfold pop-up), this book’s many layers create a rich and densely visual reading experience. Printed offset in several shades of metallic ink by Lori Spencer at the Borowsky Center for Publication Arts. Bound in perforated metal boards with screen mesh and iridescent plastic fly leaves by Daniel Kelm and staff at the Wide Awake Garage. Issued in slipcase by Jill Jevne covered with silver leaf. Edition of sixty copies, ten hors de commerce. University of Utah copy is no. 24.

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ULA Fall Workshop 2013

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Join us at the Utah Library Association’s Fall Workshop: “From Folklore to Technology.”
Luise Poulton and colleagues from the Utah Valley University Library and Brigham Young University’s Harold B. Lee Library discuss the many ways Utah’s academic libraries reach the community at large with their Special Collections. The panel discussion, “Explore, Enrich, Engage: Taking Special Collections and Rare Books to the Community,” begins at 1:30.

For more information go to: http://www.ula.org/content/program-ula-fall-workshop-2013

When: 27 September 2013
Where: Merrill-Cazier Library, Utah State University

ULA

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