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BookNET: A Network for the Technological Study of the Book and Manuscript as Artefact
Principal Investigator - Professor Mark Pollard
Main Cluster website: http://booknet.wikispaces.com/
SUMMARY OF RESEARCH The book is one of the major components of our cultural heritage - by 'book' we mean any portable object whose prime purpose is to convey documentary information (including images and text). For centuries vast effort has been devoted to investigating and interpreting the content of written documents, but, in comparison, relatively little attention has been paid to the medium itself. In fact, the study of the book as a physical object lags some way behind the technical study of other cultural objects (such as easel paintings). We propose to bring together those who are active in the study of the book (including literary and historical scholars, research scientists, as well as library curators and book conservators) in a Research Cluster, and, by combining this expertise with experience from related disciplines, generate a research agenda for such a study.
A major interest of the Research Cluster will be within the theme 'Authenticity, authentication and security', since a knowledge of the life histories of books is an essential contribution to understanding their content in context. We will also be interested in the nature of transformation of the various elements of the material objects, and the implications of this for conservation practice. The interaction between the various components of the book will be an important consideration here. As such, it also speaks to the theme 'nature of transformation'.
The Research Cluster will build on an existing research network, the 'Centre for the Study of the Book' (a partnership between the Bodleian Library, Oxford, the British Library, Universiteitsbibliotheek Leiden, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich and Princeton University).
We believe that this activity will precipitate a step-change in the way in which the physical nature of the book is taken into account when the information content is evaluated, and will remind the world that the physical book contains more information than can be represented as a digitized image. The output will be a document which summarizes the current state of research, and generates a strategy for future interdisciplinary research.
Details of forthcoming events:
Meeting 3: Wednesday 16th September 2009
The third and final meeting of the BookNET Research Cluster will be an all-day meeting, taking place in Oxford, UK. It will build on the presentations and discussion of previous meetings, exploring the issues from different perspectives, in order to generate a research agenda for the technological and scientific study of manuscripts. An overview of the research questions and issues involved, as discussed so far at previous events, will be presented by Richard Ovenden and David Howell from the Bodleian Library, Oxford University, and Mark Pollard from the Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art, Oxford University. The focus of the day will be discussion of research priorities, material research questions to be taken forward, and the issues which must be considered in order to generate results which will be beneficial to curators, conservators, librarians and heritage scientists alike.
A summary of the activities of the BookNET Research Cluster can be found on our wiki pages http://booknet.wikispaces.com/, including selected presentations/ discussion papers from previous meetings. We hope that you will join us in defining a research agenda for the technical study of this overlooked but vital component of the cultural heritage.
Agenda
10.00 Coffee
10.40 Introduction
Session 1: Curatorial Issues and Research Priorities
10.45-11.30 Overview by Richard Ovenden
Keeper of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts,
Bodleian Library, Oxford
11.30-12.00 Discussion
12.00-1.00 Lunch
Session 2: Conservation Issues and Research Priorities
1.00-1.45 Overview by David Howell
Head of Conservation and Collections Care,
Bodleian Library, Oxford
1.45-2.15 Discussion
Session 3: Materials Science Issues and Research Priorities
2.15-3.00 Overview by Mark Pollard
Director, Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art,
Oxford University
3.00-3.30 Discussion
3.30-4.15 General Discussion: Generating a Research Agenda
4.15 Coffee and Close
For more information please see the BookNET Wiki site: http://booknet.wikispaces.com/ or contact Sarah Neate – sarah.neate@ouls.ox.ac.uk
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