Print

Print


*CALL FOR PAPERS*



*“Black Bibliographia: Print/Culture/Art”*

*April 26-27, 2019*

*University of Delaware*



A symposium hosted by the

Center for Material Culture Studies <http://www.materialculture.udel.edu/>



in collaboration with

UD Library, Museums & Press <https://library.udel.edu/> and the

College of Arts & Sciences’ Paul R. Jones Initiative
<http://www.ihrc.udel.edu/paul-r-jones-initiative/>





Keynote Speakers:

Jacqueline Goldsby (Yale University) & Meredith McGill (Rutgers University)

Tia Blassingame (Scripps College)


Printer-in-Residence:

Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr.


The question "What is a black book?" is implicit in the work of scholars
and curators who examine histories of African American print production and
reading. It is equally germane to artists and printers experimenting with
the book and other print forms today. To address this question, "Black
Bibliographia: Print/Culture/Art" will host an exchange of ideas across
longstanding divides of discipline and practice. The symposium invites
participation from individuals invested in books and other print objects as
material forms, aesthetic inventions, circulating texts, and repositories
of design. In this way,"Black Bibliographia" aims to build on a growing
body of work in African American print culture—already rich in
nineteenth-century studies—while also inviting reassessment of the material
life of black bookmaking and print production in the twentieth and
twenty-first centuries.


The purpose of "Black Bibliographia: Print/Culture/Art," is to think
theoretically and practically about a number of questions: What are the
aesthetics of black books, conceived in the broadest terms, and how can we
bring book history, visual studies, and material culture into closer
collaboration? In what ways has black textuality challenged the boundaries
of print forms past and present, and how do the book arts make such
interventions visible? How does attention to the innovations of print
workers—from typesetters to booksellers to mimeograph operators—reframe
black textuality?  From the strategic adoption of typographic conventions
by black printers and publishers of the early twentieth century to the
radical break from those conventions in the alternative press of the 1960s
and ‘70s, how do the arts of the book speak to our conceptions and
constructions of blackness?


"Black Bibliographia" represents the second biennial conference sponsored
by the Center for Material Culture Studies at the University of Delaware.
We invite participants from all fields—book artists, librarians,
archivists, collectors, art historians, editors, digital humanists, and
scholars working across the disciplines of literature, design, history, and
Black Studies—to join us in critically investigating the past and futures
of black bookmaking, paper arts, print cultures, and technologies of
transmission, reproduction, and reading.



Please send abstracts of 300 words, with a brief CV, by October 5,
2018, to *[log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>**. *Papers, artist talks, and other presentation
formats welcome.


For information see http://www.materialculture.udel.edu/


Organized by Jesse Erickson
<http://guides.lib.udel.edu/prf.php?account_id=115547> (Special Collections
& English), Laura Helton
<https://www.english.udel.edu/people/lehelton> (English),
and Curtis Small
<http://conference.rbms.info/2018/speaker/curtis-small/> (Special
Collections)

Jesse R. Erickson PhD, MLIS

Postdoctoral Researcher in Special Collections and Digital Humanities

Special Collections & Museums

University of Delaware
(302) 831-8741
https://library.udel.edu/special/


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