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Posts by Leslie Howsam

A flyer for three events:
An interview of Martin Paul Eve by Matthew Kirschenbaum about “Digital-Textual Histories” on Tuesday, July 7 @ 1pm UTC
A conversation about Early Modern Writing and Publishing chaired by Andie Silva and featuring Ruth Ahnert, Sebastian E. Ahnert, Andreas Patrick Bassett, Stephanie A. Leitch, and Geoffrey Turnovsky on Wednesday, July 8 at 3pm UTC;
And a joint keynote address by Mark Lester and Mark Letteney on “Ancient Book History: What We Can Learn by Studying Material Transmission and Transformation in the Ancient Mediterranean" on Wednesday, July 8 @ 7:30pm UTC

A flyer for three events: An interview of Martin Paul Eve by Matthew Kirschenbaum about “Digital-Textual Histories” on Tuesday, July 7 @ 1pm UTC A conversation about Early Modern Writing and Publishing chaired by Andie Silva and featuring Ruth Ahnert, Sebastian E. Ahnert, Andreas Patrick Bassett, Stephanie A. Leitch, and Geoffrey Turnovsky on Wednesday, July 8 at 3pm UTC; And a joint keynote address by Mark Lester and Mark Letteney on “Ancient Book History: What We Can Learn by Studying Material Transmission and Transformation in the Ancient Mediterranean" on Wednesday, July 8 @ 7:30pm UTC

Are you looking for an online global book history festival that features work on ancient through contemporary textual cultures? Look no further! Registration is open now!

events.zoom.us/ev/Ap9iEZwmC...

1 week ago 21 11 1 3

Good 🧵 about how historical writing is distinct, as narrative, as discipline, as genre.

4 days ago 0 0 0 0

I like the way you’re thinking. For me it’s gently pulling apart the separate aspects of research as object, text, and context. But just for analysis because they work together.

4 days ago 1 0 0 0

Eliza Orme co-founded the Nineteenth Century Building Society, "which by 1885 would have the largest share capital of all the building societies in Britain".

Leslie Howsam's book on Orme, ref'd in this article in which Leslie is quoted, is #OpenAccess!

📖 www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.116...

1 week ago 1 2 0 0
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100 years before women could get mortgages, one set up a building society Trailblazer Eliza Orme was the first of her sex to earn a law degree in England — and way ahead of her time in helping others to buy homes

In today’s Times, an article about 19th century women and building societies, featuring Eliza Orme. @openbookpublish.bsky.social #feministbusinesshistory
www.thetimes.com/money/saving...

1 week ago 9 4 1 1

The 19th Century Building Society’s records would be a great start for someone doing feminist business history. They’re in Swindon.

1 week ago 5 2 0 0

It’s been fun fitting in this “archival find” (I know, it was there all along!) with what I already knew. Watch this space for more.

1 week ago 3 0 1 1
Preview
100 years before women could get mortgages, one set up a building society Trailblazer Eliza Orme was the first of her sex to earn a law degree in England — and way ahead of her time in helping others to buy homes

In today’s Times, an article about 19th century women and building societies, featuring Eliza Orme. @openbookpublish.bsky.social #feministbusinesshistory
www.thetimes.com/money/saving...

1 week ago 9 4 1 1

Creative nonfiction?

2 weeks ago 2 0 0 0
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Fabulous #bookhistory 🧵

2 weeks ago 6 1 1 0

Just posted the same thing, but my book is 20 years old this summer!

bsky.app/profile/lesl...

3 weeks ago 1 0 1 0

I’ve now received one of those AI-generated emails offering to promote my book. Reads a bit weirdly since *Old Books & New Histories* is 20 years old! But I can see how an academic author might fall for it.

3 weeks ago 3 1 1 1

Just a quick reminder that proposals for VPR's upcoming special issue on "Keywords" are due TODAY!

3 weeks ago 6 4 0 0

The Bible Society got upset about the text being corrupted in one edition by the words “to remain” — which turned out to be an instruction to the typesetter, about not cutting a punctuation mark. I don’t know whether this was typical. Maybe mid-19thc?

3 weeks ago 6 0 1 0

Thanks for this. I met “Wal” Kirsop in the early days of SHARP.

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

#bookhistory

1 month ago 4 0 0 0

Fortunately a thing whose moment has passed. Requires two hands, so what becomes of your drink?

1 month ago 2 0 1 0
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This is kind of how I remember it. Flavours (toppings) are pictured.

1 month ago 1 0 1 0

Do conferences count? If so, the mashed potato bar at 2001 SHARP in Virginia.

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This online course considers what might constitute a feminist approach to studying books, what the benefits of such approaches are, and how to incorporate them into our own work.
We will center the textual object in exploring these issues, letting artifacts drive our questions rather than the actions of book makers, sellers, or collectors. Another way of putting this is that the course won't ask who women printing books were, but rather, who determined the terms on which we engage with books. This doesn't mean ignoring the many agents involved in book work, including the people involved in the long history of book trades, the academic field of print culture and textual editing, and the intersection of these with library practices. But it means that our work this week will be focused on generating
questions about methodology rather than recovering names and histories.

This online course considers what might constitute a feminist approach to studying books, what the benefits of such approaches are, and how to incorporate them into our own work. We will center the textual object in exploring these issues, letting artifacts drive our questions rather than the actions of book makers, sellers, or collectors. Another way of putting this is that the course won't ask who women printing books were, but rather, who determined the terms on which we engage with books. This doesn't mean ignoring the many agents involved in book work, including the people involved in the long history of book trades, the academic field of print culture and textual editing, and the intersection of these with library practices. But it means that our work this week will be focused on generating questions about methodology rather than recovering names and histories.

We will also wrestle with the theory and practice of feminism, which has a history of different meanings for different communities, and how to develop it as an inclusive practice for our book work. If living a feminist life is, as Sara Ahmed argues, something we must return to over and over, something that we put into practice daily rather than something that stays in the classroom, how do we bring that into our spaces of book work?
Through a combination of short advance readings about bibliography and feminism, course discussions, and your own work with textual artifacts, we will explore what questions are brought to the forefront when we approach our work through a feminist framework.
Participants should anticipate two concurrent and two asynchronous sessions each course day, with those sessions being scheduled to accommodate the range of US time zones; asychronous sessions could involve exercises, readings, and off-camera discussions.

We will also wrestle with the theory and practice of feminism, which has a history of different meanings for different communities, and how to develop it as an inclusive practice for our book work. If living a feminist life is, as Sara Ahmed argues, something we must return to over and over, something that we put into practice daily rather than something that stays in the classroom, how do we bring that into our spaces of book work? Through a combination of short advance readings about bibliography and feminism, course discussions, and your own work with textual artifacts, we will explore what questions are brought to the forefront when we approach our work through a feminist framework. Participants should anticipate two concurrent and two asynchronous sessions each course day, with those sessions being scheduled to accommodate the range of US time zones; asychronous sessions could involve exercises, readings, and off-camera discussions.

Discussions and exercises will also try explore different models of pedagogy in order to give participants a feel for what methodologies might suit them best.
The course is intended to be of use to anyone researching, teaching, or acting as a custodian for rare books; although we will pay careful attention to the first centuries of western printing, since the study of those books have shaped the field of bibliography as a whole, the issues the course will consider cover all periods of book study. Participants should not expect to come out of the course having mastered a feminist history of books, but to leave with a set of tools to ask feminist questions of books.

Discussions and exercises will also try explore different models of pedagogy in order to give participants a feel for what methodologies might suit them best. The course is intended to be of use to anyone researching, teaching, or acting as a custodian for rare books; although we will pay careful attention to the first centuries of western printing, since the study of those books have shaped the field of bibliography as a whole, the issues the course will consider cover all periods of book study. Participants should not expect to come out of the course having mastered a feminist history of books, but to leave with a set of tools to ask feminist questions of books.

Come think about Feminist Bibliography with me this summer! I’m teaching a one-week online course for @calrbs.bsky.social—I love this class and am excited to do it again. Description below; priority deadline April 15; all details at www.calrbs.org/feminist-bib...

1 month ago 16 12 1 0

I’m fascinated by this subset of #Victorian #suffragists. How many were like Miss Brabrook, unsung, obscure, but not unremarkable?

1 month ago 1 0 0 0
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To mark International Women's Day, here's a celebration of four of pioneering women with Glasgow connections. They are: Margaret Easton Anderson, a graudate of Glasgow University and the first woman to practice law in the UK;

Cont./

#glasgow #internationalwomensday #glasgowhistory

1 month ago 45 12 1 0

For #InternationalWomensDay, introducing Eliza Margaret Brabrook (1866-1927) whose editorial and management skills brought the *Women’s Gazette* to a close in 1892 after Eliza Orme’s departure. Subeditor for a London publisher; active Liberal and feminist; daughter of a prominent intellectual.

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Mon premier article de fond sur la #découvrabilité dans l'écosystème du livre vient de paraître dans la revue Mémoires du livre/Studies in Book Culture, sous la direction de Julien Lefort-Favreau (U. Queen’s) et Sarah Brouillette (U. Carleton) : doi-org.ezproxy.usherbrooke.ca/10.7202/1122....

2 months ago 7 3 0 0

Wonderful 🧵 on Scottish medical women. Can’t help but add that Flora Masson was Eliza Orme’s niece.

1 month ago 5 2 0 0

I used to work on a series of late-19th c. books (on science). Some copies preserved in rare book room, others bundled, deteriorating , in the bottom shelves of stacks, reminders of the ones that were not in libraries at all.

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

#bookhistory

2 months ago 5 0 0 0
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Latest in the @uoftpress.bsky.social series, Studies in Book and Print Culture. #bookhistory

2 months ago 8 1 0 0

In my mind, and I think for many in SHARP, contemporary publishing studies is part of #bookhistory. Unless you go for “book studies” (which has its own problems) you’re stuck with a term that implies contemporary history as well as the past.

2 months ago 7 0 2 0

Really interesting (and optimistic) 🧵. But I notice nobody refers to this work as #bookhistory. Is this significant?

2 months ago 12 1 2 0