Rare Book School Lecture: The Parallel History of Books and Blooks160 McCormick Rd, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA
Charlottesville, VA 22904-1001
Rare Book School Lecture: The Parallel History of Books and Blooks
June 2
5:30 PM
UVA Edgar Shannon Library: Room 330
160 McCormick Rd, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA
Charlottesville, VA 22904-1001
- Contact: Kim Curtis
- Email: kcurtis@virginia.edu
Throughout the world, for hundreds of years, people have expressed themselves by making plain and decorated objects in imitation of specific titles and types of books. No genre of book or bookbinding has been ignored. Mindell Dubansky calls these objects blooks, a contraction of book-look. History has shown that infusing an object with bookish characteristics creates an emotional attachment to the object analogous to our feelings for a beloved or important book. This, in turn, increases our desire to own, share, and treasure our book-shaped objects. Love, friendship, humor, play, faith, enlightenment, and commemoration are all common and abiding themes of blooks. Dubansky's lecture will touch on some of the areas in which real books and book-like objects most closely intersect. These include how the bookbinding trade was involved in making blooks, how blook-making followed publishing trends and popular titles, how disused books have historically been repurposed as blooks, and how the idea of the book has been translated into a myriad of unexpected objects by artists and inventors.