Module Information
Course Delivery
Assessment
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | Essay 2,500 words - weighted 60% | |
Semester Assessment | A quasi-facsimile transcription inc. catalogue entry and commentary (1500 word equivalent) - weighted 40% |
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this module, students should be able to:
- Discuss the development of the printed book and some of its major participants in continental Europe.
* Analyse the principal physical characteristics of page layout in a printed book of the hand-press period.
* Identify the principal methods of book binding and problems of their conservation
* Explain the different methods of book illustration
* Outline the purposes and techniques of descriptive bibliography
* Write a bibliographical description of a printed book
* Transcribe a simple handwritten text of the early modern period
* Outline the use of provenance evidence in book history
* Describe the different types of catalogues and bibliographies used in rare-books collections
* Create appropriate MARC catalogue records for a collection of early printed books by re-using existing machine-readable records to creating new ones
* Examine the place of the rare book in the contemporary academic and commercial context
Brief description
This module will enable students to consider the book as a physical object (typography, bindings, illustration, evidence of ownership) and to understandits place in the modern scholarly context.
Content
- Unit One: History of the book; The Continental Book
- Unit Two: The look of the book; binding and illustration
- Unit Three: Descriptive bibliography
- Unit Four: Traces of Ownership
- Unit Five: Catalogues and cataloguing
- Unit Six: Beyond the Book
Aims
- increase their knowledge of the history of the printed book and its associated technologies;
- increase their awareness of the curatorial problems involved in managing rare book collections;
- learn the skills of bibliographical analysis and description and specialist problems of rare books cataloguing.
Module Skills
Skills Type | Skills details |
---|---|
Communication | Writing and presentation skills |
Improving own Learning and Performance | Implicitly, by building on materials from the Introductory module and development of skills within this module |
Information Technology | Use of web-based catalogues and databases; use of web-based conference facilities |
Personal Development and Career planning | Use of the library working environment in activities and assignments in a specialist area of library and information studies |
Problem solving | Analysis and description of the physical make-up and appearance of early printed books. |
Research skills | Several activities involve a researched follow-up to taught examples |
Subject Specific Skills | Bibliographical analysis and description, rare-books cataloguing, identification of engraving techniques, provenance research |
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 6