Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 430. Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London <http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/> <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/> [1] From: jason.mann@vanderbilt.edu (18) Subject: Managing Online Consortia pre-conference workshop announcement [2] From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> (159) Subject: Design, Book Crafts & the Digital Age --[1]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2000 08:56:38 +0100 From: jason.mann@vanderbilt.edu Subject: Managing Online Consortia pre-conference workshop announcement ANNOUNCEMENT 1: Managing Online Consortia pre-conference workshop announcement <http://www.cael.org/index2.html> Attend CAEL's first conference of the 21st Century, visit our web site for more details: http://www.cael.org/index2.html CAEL and University of Maryland University College present: Managing Online Education Partnerships: Plain Talk and Practical Tools for Internet-Based Consortia The Drake Hotel; Chicago, IL November 14 - 15, 2000 Register today to participate in the first ever, Managing Online Education Partnerships on November 14-15. This conference will provide a national forum for administrators and/or participants who work with Internet-based education consortia and alliances to discuss the conceptual issues and practicalities of operating successful and mutually beneficial partnerships. Focusing on practical guides and tools for those who develop and manage consortia, this conference will create a framework of communication and collegiality for discussing common issues and concerns. [material deleted] --[2]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2000 08:57:17 +0100 From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> Subject: Design, Book Crafts & the Digital Age NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources from across the Community October 26, 2000 On the Digital Brink: Notes from Printing History Conference <http://printinghistory.org/>http://printinghistory.org/ http://www.forewordmagazine.com/ These informal, but well-written, notes from part of the annual conference of the American Printing History Association I think bring a fresh perspective on much of our work. David Green =========== >Date: Wed, 25 Oct 2000 16:43:44 -0400 >From: ForeWord Magazine <circ@traverse.com> >To: Multiple recipients of Foreword - Sent by <circ@traverse.com> >> >ForeWord This Week is a weekly e-mail news service covering independent >publishing of interest to booksellers, librarians and other trade >professionals. > >FOREWORD THIS WEEK 10.25.00 > >1. T-SHIRT BACK ON: SUBPOENED FOR B. . . >2. POSTCARD FROM ROCHESTER, NY >3. POST SCRIPT ABOUT A UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY <<SNIP>> 2. POSTCARD FROM ROCHESTER, NY On The Digital Brink at the 25th Annual Conference of the American Printing History Association. Swept along by the onrush of digital developments, it can be both useful and necessary to pause and take stock of where we're going and where we came from -- and to celebrate the enduring values which lend meaning to what we are up to from day to day. Because of the intriguing theme of its 25th Annual Meeting, I decided to drive up to Rochester from Woodstock, New York, and attend my first APHA meeting. I've been a closet member on and off through the years, relishing the association's newsletter and its journal, "Printing History," for the discussions of the history and art of type and printing, and for the ads and notices of what is going on in the world of collecting and private presses -- all framed in elegant design and illustration. (For membership information: www.printinghistory.org ). So, on arriving I found some one hundred diverse keepers of the fine traditions of printing and typography - designers, librarians, scholars, printers, calligraphers, collectors, publishers - friendly and eager enthusiasts all -- assembled at the Rochester Institute of Technology for two days on October 20th and 21st. There we examined how the new technologies are being used to explore and reveal book and graphic arts history as well as used to develop new ways for their expression and dispersion. But this was not a hand-wringing conclave of traditionalists bemoaning the loss of art and craft in the face of progress. To the contrary, I found the best of all possible worlds where true lovers of the uses of graphics and type apply their classic verities in new forms. In fact, one of the high points was a demonstration by Australian born artist, photographer, lecturer and author Douglas Holleley. He presented some exquisite digitally scanned paper sculptures in final images enhanced by PhotoShop. Yet not out of sight or out of mind were the handiwork of the great printers and type designers from Aldus Manutius and Claude Garamond to Frederick Goudy and Stanley Morison. There could have been no better setting for all of this than the comfortable lecture hall at the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science (named after the inventor of Xerography) and RIT's Carey Graphic Arts Collection of rare books and manuscripts at its Wallace Library, and the adjacent gallery and letterpress print shop. Among the highlights: We were treated by two RIT professors and a Xerox scientist to some of the outcomes of their fascinating application of infrared and ultraviolet analysis and digital imaging technologies in the recovery of degraded images in the Dead Sea Scrolls as well as in uncovering the original texts erased and overwritten on medieval parchment palimpsests. A set of original Archimedes essays was the object of the latter. Frank Romano, one of the foremost authorities on digital publishing technology, demonstrated the need for historic preservation. He examined the emergence and disappearance, in the space of fifty years (1946-96), of the scores of businesses which brought into the market the many forms of photocomposition that provided the bridge between the old hot metal and today's computer driven image setting. In the course of his lecture, Czeslaw (Chet) Grycz, CEO and Publisher of Octavo (Adobe Founder John Warnok is their Chairman of the Board), presented a view of his organization as a digital scholarly publishing and preservation company. Octavo (<http://www.octavo.com>http://www.octavo.com) is working with libraries and archivists to create digital editions of some of the most "important milestones of thought and culture" in works such as those by Galileo, Isaac Newton, Benjamin Franklin, William Shakespeare and many others. The imagination, quality and functionality of the images, tools and commentaries that accompany these editions are superlative. Grycz's topic was "Perdurability: Digital Books and Beatrice Warde's Vision of Permanence." As written in the program, "in her celebrated broadsheet announcing Eric Gill's Perpetua typeface, Beatrice Ward compared the permanence of a text printed in multiple copies on flimsy paper to that of one deeply chiseled on a massive Roman monument." Look which one prevailed. The entire conference was framed by a powerful opening keynote by Robert Bringhurst, noted scholar and lecturer and author of The Elements of Typographic Style. Bringhurst's words were so substantial that I can only poorly characterize, but I will attempt to provide a small portion here (the full text of it hopefully will appear in "Printing History"). The first and original book given to us is the world itself - all people read it - and in the development of letter forms and writing people make their own books - miniatures encompassing portions of the original. And it is the extent of our connection to this world that calibrates the uses of our mind. Bringhurst's breathtaking concept followed his imaginative development of the ways in which images, letter forms, and linguistics are in themselves complex forms of art as well as modes of human gesture that connect us to our own stories as well as to those of others. The digital era finds us telling these stories in a setting several times removed from the sensory surround of the world "outside" - - of the original book -- and from the highly tactile experience of the physical books we have used and the very personal trade marks reflected in our speech and handwriting. The values and messages communicated by these forms of expression are replaced by the uniform ASCII code, which creates indistinguishably uniform letterforms as we tap out our messages on keyboards around the world. However different the touch, the result is the same, Bringhurst observed - and the experience of reading, detached from its physicality has become a spectator sport. That is not the whole of , or the end of the story. It is simply the beginning of a new one, I inferred. Whole new extensions of language and the preservation of cultures are opened up by this digital revolution - as is the challenge and the opportunity to stay connected with our original book. -Gene Schwartz Editor-at-Large <<SNIP>> > >*****Advertisement******************************** > >PUBLISHERS: Join us for a conference that covers ebooks AND > >traditional publishing! > > > >You are invited to the 19th Annual National Publishing > >Conference, November 2-4 in Colorado Springs. Professional- > >level seminars for publishers, editors, designers, and marketers; > >the latest information on e-publishing; networking events. > >Contact Publishers Association of the West, pubwest1@aol.com, > >for more info. Sponsored by PublishingOnline. > >****************************************************** > > >You received this transmission because you are a subscriber to Foreword > This > >Week. > > > >To subscribe to this list, send an email message to > >lists@brightbridge.net > >include in the BODY of the message: > >"subscribe foreword your_firstname your_lastname" > > > >To unsubscribe to this list, send an email message to > >lists@brightbridge.net > >include in the BODY of the message: > >"unsubscribe foreword" ============================================================== NINCH-Announce is an announcement listserv, produced by the National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage (NINCH). The subjects of announcements are not the projects of NINCH, unless otherwise noted; neither does NINCH necessarily endorse the subjects of announcements. We attempt to credit all re-distributed news and announcements and appreciate reciprocal credit. 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