November 1995 to March 1996
Preface
he
Golda Meir Library holds a modest collection of books printed before 1501.
The value of these holdings lies not in its size, but in their presence as exemplars
of the earliest developments of book production in the first fifty years of
printing, complementing the library's holdings of early printed works. Just
as we are currently poised on the cusp of a transition from print to electronic
and multimedia communication, incunabula offers physical evidence of the transitional
phase between the manuscript and print traditions.
he Infancy of Printing" includes
twelve examples of books printed before 1501 from the library's Special Collections
and American Geographical Society Collection.
The Golda Meir Library holds many old and rare materials for research and teaching,
but the oldest books, those printed between 1455 and 1501, are held in these
two departments. Books printed during this period are called incunabula or incunables,
from the Latin word for cradle, since the late fifteenth century constitutes
the infancy of the printing tradition. Studying incunabula reveals much about
the life, culture, and tastes of the educated during the Renaissance, and offers
considerable insight into the origins of a tradition that has vastly affected
the course of human culture and development. The exhibition has been organized
to bring some focus to these issues.
he exhibition is divided
into three sections: 1.) Manuscript Tradition and the Transition to Printing;
2.) Sacred Texts; 3.) Secular Texts. You may proceed on a guided tour of the
exhibit by moving sequentially from one page to the next, or you can get access
to individual items in the exhibit by viewing the Table
of Contents.
eatured in the exhibition
is the beautifully rubricated 1473 edition of St. Augustine's De civitate
dei (City of God), printed by Gutenberg's successor Peter Schoeffer. This
copy had been placed on loan in the Golda Meir Library's Special Collections
until 1999 in order to provide an appropriate environment for preservation,
while ensuring secure access to the volume by students and scholars. It was
acquired by Marquette University, Milwaukee, in March 1999.
ther materials in the exhibition
include a leaf from the 1459 Catholicon printed in Mainz by Johann Gutenberg;
a 1478 Roman printing of Ptolemy's Cosmographia, containing some of the
earliest copperplate engravings in a printed book, and one of only two known
copies printed on vellum; and a leaf from William Caxton's 1478 printing of
Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, one of the earliest books printed
in England. A unique element in this exhibit was a hands-on demonstration of
the transition from the manuscript tradition to early printing, featuring a
facsimile of Gutenberg's 1455/56 42-line Bible, considered the first book to
be printed, and three salvaged fragments of early renaissance manuscripts on
loan to the library for this exhibit from the Book Restoration and Conservation
Co. of Kenosha.
n association with the exhibition,
the Friends of the Golda Meir Library sponsored a public lecture on "The
World of the Renaissance Print Shop" by Merry Wiesner-Hanks, UWM professor
of history and director of the Women's Studies Program. Professor Wiesner-Hanks's
area of research is sixteenth-century Germany, particularly women's lives, and
her documentary evidence begins with the advent of printing in the 1450s. Her
presentation, followed by a reception and viewing of the exhibition, took place
in the Fourth Floor Conference Center, Golda Meir Library, on Sunday, January
21, 1996.
nder the direction of Special
Collections Librarian Max Yela, "The Infancy
of Printing" was researched and prepared by student interns Christopher Barth
and Anne Quinn, both graduate students in the UWM
School of Library and Information Science.
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URL: http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/Library/special/exhibits/incunab/incpref.htm
Last edited on Monday, October 11, 1999.