From woodwindy at gmail.com Tue Feb 20 12:54:34 2018 From: woodwindy at gmail.com (Wendy Gale) Date: Tue, 20 Feb 2018 13:54:34 -0500 Subject: [EKStationers] Fwd: [hist-book] Material Texts: Ian Gadd, February 26 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: I thought this might be of interest, for folks who can make it to Philly this coming Monday afternoon. -Sabine ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Alexander Ponsen Date: Tue, Feb 20, 2018 at 10:11 AM Subject: [hist-book] Material Texts: Ian Gadd, February 26 To: english-hist-book at groups.english.upenn.edu Dear friends and colleagues, Please join us Monday, February 26, for this semester?s next meeting of the Workshop in the History of Material Texts . We will convene at our usual time and place: 5:15pm in the Class of 1978 Pavilion in the Kislak Center on the 6th Floor of Van Pelt-Dietrich Library. We will be welcoming Ian Gadd for a talk entitled: ??Entered for his copy?: creating Stationers? Register Online.? Ian writes: *The Stationers? Register is one of the most consulted archival documents of the early modern period. It is also, frankly, one of the least understood. First established in 1557 by the London Stationers? Company to record the publishing rights of its members and cited in Britain?s first copyright statute in 1710, it survives in an almost unbroken sequence from 1557 until 1924. It played a crucial role in the development of Anglo-American copyright.* *This presentation will provide an account of the development of the Stationers? Register during the early modern period, describing its purpose, its procedures, and its many idiosyncrasies. It will also explain how a new digital project, ?Stationers? Register Online?, aims to transform our understanding of how early modern ?copyright? worked by creating the first publicly available database of the copy-entries recorded in the Stationers? Register. * Ian Gadd is a Professor of English Literature at Bath Spa University, and the Academic Director of the Global Academy of Liberal Arts (GALA), an international network of universities founded by Bath Spa in 2014. He is a General Editor of the *Cambridge Edition of the Works of Jonathan Swift*, and was a volume editor for *The History of Oxford University Press* (2013-17). He is a past president of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing (SHARP). He wrote his Oxford D.Phil. on the Stationers? Company, has taught courses on the Stationers? Company at Rare Book School, and is currently editing Liber A, the only major early modern record in the Company?s archive that has not yet been published. ? Please forward this email widely to any who might be interested, and please join us on following Mondays throughout the semester. All are welcome! Those who do not hold University of Pennsylvania ID cards should bring another form of photo identification in order to enter the library building. ? SPRING 2018 SCHEDULE Feb 26: Ian Gadd (Bath Spa University), ??Entered for his copy?: Creating Stationers? Register Online? Mar 5: SPRING BREAK Mar 12: Peter Stallybrass (Penn), ?Whitman: Manuscript in Print? Mar 19: Sonia Hazard (Franklin & Marshall), ?America?s Cargo Cult: How Joseph Smith Discovered Printing Plates and Founded Mormonism? Mar 26: Eyal Poleg (Queen Mary, University of London), ?The Limits of Book Technologies: The Messy Implementation of Novel Features in English Bibles, 1200-1600? Apr 2: Andr? Dombrowski (Penn), ?How Multimedial was the 19th Century? The Case of Photo-Sculpture? Apr 9: Lodovica Braida (L?Universit? degli Studi di Milano), ??Dangerous Books?. Italian Epistolary Collections in the Sixteenth Century: Censorship and Self-Censorship? Apr 16: Roger Chartier (Penn), ?Who Is the Author? Translating Shakespeare in Eighteenth-Century France and Spain: From Voltaire to Morat?n? Apr 23: Michael Suarez (Virginia), ??A kind of printing:? The Material Texts of *M?dailles sur les principaux ?v?nements du r?gne de Louis le Grand* (1702, 1723)? ? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.gallowglass.org/pipermail/ekstationers/attachments/20180220/f2528dd8/attachment.htm From lylefitzw at gmail.com Tue Feb 20 14:31:04 2018 From: lylefitzw at gmail.com (Lyle H. Gray) Date: Tue, 20 Feb 2018 15:31:04 -0500 Subject: [EKStationers] Fwd: [hist-book] Material Texts: Ian Gadd, February 26 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Oh, that _would_ be good to attend. Lyle On Tue, Feb 20, 2018 at 1:54 PM, Wendy Gale wrote: > I thought this might be of interest, for folks who can make it to Philly > this coming Monday afternoon. > > -Sabine > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > From: Alexander Ponsen > Date: Tue, Feb 20, 2018 at 10:11 AM > Subject: [hist-book] Material Texts: Ian Gadd, February 26 > To: english-hist-book at groups.english.upenn.edu > > > Dear friends and colleagues, > > > Please join us Monday, February 26, for this semester?s next meeting of > the Workshop in the History of Material Texts > . We > will convene at our usual time and place: 5:15pm in the Class of 1978 > Pavilion in the Kislak Center on the 6th Floor of Van Pelt-Dietrich Library. > > We will be welcoming Ian Gadd for a talk entitled: ??Entered for his > copy?: creating Stationers? Register Online.? Ian writes: > > *The Stationers? Register is one of the most consulted archival > documents of the early modern period. It is also, frankly, one of the least > understood. First established in 1557 by the London Stationers? Company to > record the publishing rights of its members and cited in Britain?s first > copyright statute in 1710, it survives in an almost unbroken sequence from > 1557 until 1924. It played a crucial role in the development > of Anglo-American copyright.* > > > > *This presentation will provide an account of the development of the > Stationers? Register during the early modern period, describing its > purpose, its procedures, and its many idiosyncrasies. It will also explain > how a new digital project, ?Stationers? Register Online?, aims to transform > our understanding of how early modern ?copyright? worked by creating the > first publicly available database of the copy-entries recorded in the > Stationers? Register. * > > > > Ian Gadd is a Professor of English Literature at Bath Spa University, and > the Academic Director of the Global Academy of Liberal Arts (GALA), an > international network of universities founded by Bath Spa in 2014. He is a > General Editor of the *Cambridge Edition of the Works of Jonathan Swift*, > and was a volume editor for *The History of Oxford University Press* (2013-17). > He is a past president of the Society for the History of Authorship, > Reading and Publishing (SHARP). He wrote his Oxford D.Phil. on > the Stationers? Company, has taught courses on the Stationers? Company at > Rare Book School, and is currently editing Liber A, the only major early > modern record in the Company?s archive that has not yet been published. > > > ? > > Please forward this email widely to any who might be interested, and > please join us on following Mondays throughout the semester. All are > welcome! Those who do not hold University of Pennsylvania ID cards should > bring another form of photo identification in order to enter the library > building. > > > > ? > > SPRING 2018 SCHEDULE > > > > Feb 26: Ian Gadd (Bath Spa University), ??Entered for his copy?: Creating > Stationers? Register Online? > > > > Mar 5: SPRING BREAK > > > > Mar 12: Peter Stallybrass (Penn), ?Whitman: Manuscript in Print? > > > > Mar 19: Sonia Hazard (Franklin & Marshall), ?America?s Cargo Cult: How > Joseph Smith Discovered Printing Plates and Founded Mormonism? > > > > Mar 26: Eyal Poleg (Queen Mary, University of London), ?The Limits of Book > Technologies: The Messy Implementation of Novel Features in English Bibles, > 1200-1600? > > > > Apr 2: Andr? Dombrowski (Penn), ?How Multimedial was the 19th Century? The > Case of Photo-Sculpture? > > > > Apr 9: Lodovica Braida (L?Universit? degli Studi di Milano), ??Dangerous > Books?. Italian Epistolary Collections in the Sixteenth Century: Censorship > and Self-Censorship? > > > > Apr 16: Roger Chartier (Penn), ?Who Is the Author? Translating Shakespeare > in Eighteenth-Century France and Spain: From Voltaire to Morat?n? > > > > Apr 23: Michael Suarez (Virginia), ??A kind of printing:? The Material > Texts of *M?dailles sur les principaux ?v?nements du r?gne de Louis le > Grand* (1702, 1723)? > > > > ? > > > > _______________________________________________ > Ekstationers mailing list > Ekstationers at lists.gallowglass.org > http://lists.gallowglass.org/mailman/listinfo/ekstationers > > -- Shared knowledge is preserved knowledge. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.gallowglass.org/pipermail/ekstationers/attachments/20180220/be0c0d2f/attachment-0001.htm From lindafowens at netzero.net Tue Feb 20 14:35:34 2018 From: lindafowens at netzero.net (lindafowens at netzero.net) Date: Tue, 20 Feb 2018 20:35:34 GMT Subject: [EKStationers] Fwd: [hist-book] Material Texts: Ian Gadd, February 26 Message-ID: <20180220.153534.13059.2@webmail01.dca.untd.com> Sorry, but thanks for the invite, LInda Owens aka Luisa von Farnemwald. ---------- Original Message ---------- From: Wendy Gale To: ekstationers at lists.gallowglass.org Subject: [EKStationers] Fwd: [hist-book] Material Texts: Ian Gadd, February 26 Date: Tue, 20 Feb 2018 13:54:34 -0500 I thought this might be of interest, for folks who can make it to Philly this coming Monday afternoon. ? ? ? ? -Sabine ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Alexander Ponsen Date: Tue, Feb 20, 2018 at 10:11 AM Subject: [hist-book] Material Texts: Ian Gadd, February 26 To: english-hist-book at groups.english.upenn.edu Dear friends and colleagues, Please join us Monday, February 26, for this semester?€™s next meeting of the Workshop in the History of Material Texts. We will convene at our usual time and place: 5:15pm in the Class of 1978 Pavilion in the Kislak Center on the 6th Floor of Van Pelt-Dietrich Library. We will be welcoming Ian Gadd for a talk entitled: ?€œ?€˜Entered for his copy?€™: creating Stationers?€™ Register Online.?€?Ianwrites: The Stationers?€™ Register is one of the most consulted archival documents? of the early modern period. It is also, frankly, one of the least understood. First established in 1557 by the London Stationers?€™ Company to record the publishing rights of its members and cited in Britain?€™s first copyright statute in 1710, it? survives in an almost unbroken sequence from 1557 until 1924. It played a crucial role in the development of? Anglo-American copyright. ? This presentation will provide an account of the development of the Stationers?€™ Register during the early modern period, describing its purpose, its procedures, and its many idiosyncrasies. It will also explain how a new digital project,? ?€˜Stationers?€™ Register Online?€™, aims to transform our understanding of how early modern ?€˜copyright?€™ worked by creating the first publicly available? database of the copy-entries recorded in the Stationers?€™ Register.? ? ? Ian Gadd is a Professor of English Literature at Bath Spa University, and the Academic Director of the Global Academy of Liberal Arts (GALA), an international network of universities founded by Bath Spa in 2014. He is a General Editor of the? Cambridge Edition of the Works of Jonathan Swift, and was a volume editor for? The History of Oxford University Press? (2013-17). He is a past president of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing (SHARP). He wrote his Oxford D.Phil. on the? Stationers?€™ Company, has taught courses on the Stationers?€™ Company at Rare Book School, and is currently editing Liber A, the only major early modern record in the Company?€™s archive that has not yet been published.? ?€” Please forward this email widely to any who might be interested, and please join us on following Mondays throughout the semester. All are welcome! Those who do not hold University of Pennsylvania ID cards should bring another form of photo identification in order to enter the library building. ? ?€” SPRING 2018 SCHEDULE ? ? ? ? Feb 26: Ian Gadd (Bath Spa University), ?€œ?€˜Entered for his copy?€™: Creating Stationers?€™ Register Online?€? ? Mar 5: SPRING BREAK ? Mar 12: Peter Stallybrass (Penn), ?€œWhitman: Manuscript in Print?€? ? Mar 19: Sonia Hazard (Franklin & Marshall), ?€œAmerica?€™s Cargo Cult: How Joseph Smith Discovered Printing Plates and Founded Mormonism?€? ? Mar 26: Eyal Poleg (Queen Mary, University of London), ?€œThe Limits of Book Technologies: The Messy Implementation of Novel Features in English Bibles, 1200-1600?€? ? Apr 2: Andr?? Dombrowski (Penn), ?€œHow Multimedial was the 19th Century? The Case of Photo-Sculpture?€? ? Apr 9: Lodovica Braida (L?€™Universit? degli Studi di Milano), ?€œ?€˜Dangerous Books?€™. Italian Epistolary Collections in the Sixteenth Century: Censorship and Self-Censorship?€? ? Apr 16: Roger Chartier (Penn), ?€œWho Is the Author? Translating Shakespeare in Eighteenth-Century? France and Spain: From Voltaire to Morat?­n?€? ? Apr 23: Michael Suarez (Virginia), ?€œ?€˜A kind of printing:?€™ The Material Texts of M??dailles sur les principaux ??v??nements du r??gne de Louis le Grand (1702, 1723)?€? ? ?€” ____________________________________________________________ Constant Fatigue Is A Warning Sign??? Here's The Simple Fix gundrymd.com http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3241/5a8c86e6888436e671fcst01duc -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.gallowglass.org/pipermail/ekstationers/attachments/20180220/10481137/attachment.htm