Subject: Report on RBMS
The following appeared on NOTRBCAT and is reposted here with permission. (Apologies to those of you who have already seen this, but DistList/NOTRBCAT cross-subscription is pretty low). Date: 1 Jul 91 Sender: Rare Book and Special Collections Catalogers <NOTRBCAT [at] INDYCMS__BITNET> From: Kathryn Wright <LIBKAT [at] INDST__bitnet> Subject: RBMS '91 partial overview Keeping the Facts in Artifacts: Conserving the Physical Evidence of Special Collections Materials and its Impact on Research Thirty-Second RBMS Preconference June 25-28, 1991 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Duke University ================================================================== That heading is supposed to take care of it for this and all other communiques relating to RBMS 91. ================================================================== Here starts (I hope) a series of reports on the 1991 RBMS preconference. The sessions noted below are those that I attended. Like Michael Winship with his BAL, I'll enter only those that I've seen myself. The "Some of us heard ..." entries indicate one of four concurrent sessions. The others certainly were not without interest, and I do hope that we hear from them. I am *not* intend- ing to imply that I'll be reporting more fully on each of those listed below, now. There's plenty to go around. Especially since my notes seem not to be full enough to support the sensible abstracts that I thought they could. So I propose that we utilize the ability of this e-medium to make available emendations from the NOTRBCAT group, other participants who happen to know more and better on certain points. At least when you see something signed by y.t., *please* be appropriately suspicious and critical and post your corrigenda and addenda right here. -- Ksw ==================================================================== I. Brief partial overview We heard Nicholas Pickwoad, as the first to point out that conservatorial intervention inevitably destroys historical evidence, describe some of his findings in a collection of Italian parchment bindings. We heard Barbra Buckner Higginbotham trace some of the history of book preservation and conservation. We heard Paul F. Grendler describe how Italian Renaissance book buyers were able to identify popular vs. scholarly books on the basis of page size, letter of type, and number of columns per page. We heard Amy M. Thomas discuss the reading habits of a well-born Georgia lady of the nineteenth century, based upon her 40-year diary. We watched Carmine Andrew Prioli show changes in the advertising strategy of White Owl cigars as it adjusted to changing social conditions from World War I to World War II. Some of us heard Laura Stalker, Jackie Dooley, Suzy Taraba, and Belinda Urquiza point out differences between the new _Descriptive Cataloging of Rare Books_ and the current _Bibliographic Description of Rare Books_. LC begins implementation of DCRB on July 1 - *today*. I hope that the presenters can be persuaded to contribute usefully to an e-presentation for the forum - perhaps to save their reputations. My notes are certainly totally inadequate. A number of us heard Allen Tucker of RLG comment upon the much- discussed future of RLIN, in the wake of the RLG board meeting. The condensed RLG document that Officer Ed posted to NOTRBCAT has been well distributed electronically. So RLG members won't be seeing that "Welcome to OCLC" message after all. We heard Carolyn Clark Morrow present the politics and policies of preservation programs, drawing upon her experience at Harvard, and posit the characteristics of contracting outside for conservation work. We heard John Townsend tell of the pansies (restoration workers) and thugs (microfilmers of guillotined books) at the New York Public Library as an introduction to the considerations that he currently faces in directing the conservation/preservation program for New York State. We heard Margaret Child address means of developing conservation programs by appealing to both the idealism and the baser instincts of those with power. Some of us heard Alexandra Mason discuss provenance files at the University of Kansas and the use of PC databases for collection access; Rita Bottoms describe the control of contemporary special collections, using "appropriate technology," at the University of California at Santa Cruz; Gretchen Lagana describe the also relatively new special collections at the University of Illinois at Chicago, with emphasis upon the control of the manuscript collections; and Robin Overmier outline the results of her survey of practices in maintaining provenance files. Some of us heard Martin Davies describe the Incunabula Short Title Catalog and its methods of compilation at the British Library; Henry Snyder give an overview of major STC projects; and Jan Bos describe the STC Netherlands project. Relatively few of us observed Martin Davies call up the ISTC and manipulate it, in more sophisticated ways than RLIN allows, through Blaise on the British Library mainframe. We heard Jan Paris evaluate the conservatorial role as providing an intelligent analysis of the need to preserve the historical veracity of an item versus the need to conserve it in usable form, illustrating the dilemma with an exceptional manuscript item preserving the record of a Jewish community in Lithuania over three centuries. We heard Michael Winship describe some of his guidelines and problems in editing the _Bibliography of American Literature_, also remarking on conservatorial techniques that destroy publication history. And we heard Terry Belanger from the floor challenge the view that [all copies of?] all old books should be preserved, calling instead for triage - consciously rejecting preservation for 90% of old materials in order to concentrate efforts on the most significant 10%. Kathryn Wright Indiana State University Date: 3 Jul 91 Sender: Rare Book and Special Collections Catalogers <NOTRBCAT [at] INDYCMS__BITNET> From: Kathryn Wright <LIBKAT [at] INDST__bitnet> Subject: RBMS 91: Winship on research and the physical evidence of books I wanted to get this one, on the very last presentation at RBMS, out in order to fill in the Belanger statement and place it in its immediate context. Sorry this got so long, though. But typical. -- Kathryn Wright, Indiana State U. ==================================================================== Exploring Content and Form Research Stemming from the Examination of Physical Evidence Michael Winship editor of _Bibliography of American Literature_ Assoc. Prof. Dept. of English University of Texas at Austin MW stated that during the past fifteen years when he has been involved in completing the BAL, he has examined and prepared descriptions for some 100,000 books. In order for a title to be listed in BAL, he insists on access to the original edition. Unrevised reprints are generally omitted; BAL focuses on the first appearance of editions. Articles appear only if later published in book form. BAL describes the title page exactly and records volume size, binding, leaf size, and location. Microfilm evidence was accepted from the Center for Research Libraries for one item of which the original location was unknown, but thought to be Duke University. Although Suzy Taraba of Duke sent a photocopy of the title page, for MW the book still was not real until he had seen it himself. Now in North Carolina himself, he had still not gone to see it. (And sounded as if he might not.) Another interesting case, still unresolved, involves the second publication of the Georgian William Tappan Thompson, _Chronicles of of Pineville_, which, after two changes of publisher, showed an 1843 copyright date after its apparent first publication in 1845. The 1845 date appeared on the title page, as usual for first publication and was removed from later impressions, again as usual. No copy carrying the date of 1843 on the title page has yet turned up. MW usually asks for all evidence included that might identify the first publication and to differentiate it from subsequent printings. Changes in advertisements are important - are they printed on integral leaves? Dating of ownership marks can be significant. The use of an edition in cultural history relies on its usage marks. The ability to comprehend a text depends upon its physical form. Reading, MW said, is hardly the only use of books. He pointed out some other common and not-so-common uses, including propping up other objects (like windows), throwing to vent anger, etc., etc. Books are definitely cultural objects. As for reading, he believes that in academia "photocopy" may now be understood as equivalent to "read" -- when he asks a colleague whether he has read X-- X--- X--- yet, the colleague will answer that he has and rummage around on his desk to produce the photocopy as proof. Preservation techniques destroying publication history do serve other uses, notably prolonging the life of the original text of the item. But if it is bad for the original publication to be utterly destroyed by microfilming, it is worse if the process not only obliterates that one copy but, through distribution of the microfilm, leads other repositories to destroy their own originals. Bibliographers, arguably the ultimate lovers of books, may also cause damage to them through their study. Tanselle's view that every copy of every book is a rare one and worthy of retention is impractical due to the numbers and the need for usage, which then becomes part of the book's history. As an example of the difficulty in finding physical evidence of known publications, MW cited his own dissertation, the goal of which was to examine as many copies as possible of the publications of Ticknor and Fields in 1856. He had assumed that this project would be fairly easy for three reasons: 1) the firm was a new one 2) the firm contributed a copy of each publication to Harvard College 3) the firm's business records survived, leading a collector to start gathering one copy of each publication In spite of all this, MW found that some copies simply were no longer findable. The first use of a book, MW pointed out, is the first step in using up the book, and that is a natural process. He knows someone who has a book uncut, one still in shrink wrap. He himself has one that is still in shrink wrap. But, he said, don't keep books in shrink wrap. From the floor, Terry Belanger rose to say that he disagreed strongly with the view that all old books should be retained, and cited the Melcher lecture soon to be published. He suggested that under present and foreseeable economic constraints, it was only wise to advise the willful triage of 90% of the surviving material in order to select the most valuable 10%. Otherwise, circumstances will force selection of the 10% at random. MW agreed that, practically speaking, not everything could be retained. He said that he was fearful that duplicate libraries would spring up all over the country due to vendors' approval plans. Alice Schreyer remarked that MW's statements suggest a need for cooperation in conservatorship. *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:8 Distributed: Sunday, July 7, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-8-002 ***Received on Sunday, 7 July, 1991