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Publications of the Penn Libraries

The Penn Libraries occasionally produces exhibition catalogs and other scholarly publications. These works reflect the broad scholarly expertise of library staff and document exhibits put on by the Libraries going back more than a decade. Many of them are available via their publishers.

A student looking down at a large open book on a bookshelf in Van Pelt Library.

The Bibliophile as Bookbinder: The Angling Bindings of S. A. Neff, Jr.

By S.A. Neff, Jr., Lynne Farrington, and Cara Schlesinger

Related Exhibition: The Bibliophile as Bookbinder: The Angling Binding of S.A. Neff, Jr., 2019

The Bibliophile as Bookbinder explores one man’s passion for the natural world and the world of books. Over five decades ago, Mr. Neff began a serious pursuit both of trout and books on the art of angling. In the early 1980s, Mr. Neff transitioned from a career in graphic design to fine bookbinding. For over two decades, he has focused his binding efforts exclusively on work for his angling library. His collection of angling bindings, unique in its genre, will remain intact in perpetuity in the Penn Libraries. This fully-illustrated catalogue includes essays by Sid A. Neff, Jr., Lynne Farrington, and Cara Schlesinger, and features 230 full-color images, a glossary of terms, and a bibliography.

Purchase Online

Two individuals walk down a paved pathway next to the Holman Biotech Commons.

Color in American Fine and Private Press Books, 1890-2015 The Jean-Francois Vilain and Roger S. Wieck Collection Exhibition catalogue

Edited by Jean-François Vilain and Lynne Farrington

Related Exhibition: Across the Spectrum: Color in American Fine and Private Press Books, 1890-2015, 2016

Color in American Fine and Private Press Books explores the establishment of a fine and private press movement in America, beginning at the end of the nineteenth century and continuing to the present day, through its various uses of color. This illustrated full color catalogue of the 2016 exhibition at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries was designed by Jerry Kelly and includes essays by Lynne Farrington, Russell Maret, and Jean-Francois Vilain as well as exhibition checklist and list of presses in the collection.

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Constellations of Atlantic Jewish History, 1555-1890: The Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica

Edited by Arthur Kiron

Related Exhibition: Constellations of Atlantic Jewish History, 1555-1890, 2014

This illustrated volume serves as a companion to the 2014 exhibition of highlights from the Kaplan Collection, including five scholarly essays by Dianne Ashton, Aviva Ben-Ur, Arthur Kiron, Adam Mendelsohn, and Jonathan D. Sarna that respond to and illuminate the selections of curator and editor Arthur Kiron. With a prologue by the collector, an introduction by the curator, an exhibition checklist, and a bibliography, it is a valuable introduction to the collection. The Kaplan Collection, donated to Penn in 2012 and considered to be the most important collection of its kind, consists of over 11,000 books, manuscripts, art, and everyday objects documenting commercial, social, religious, political, and cultural Jewish life from colonial times through the end of the 19th century.

No longer available

"The Good Education of Youth": Worlds of Learning in the Age of Franklin

Edited by John Pollack

Related Exhibition: Education the Youth of Pennsylvania: Worlds of Learning in the Age of Franklin, 2006

This book is an exploration of education, schools, and methods of schooling in Pennsylvania and the Mid-Atlantic in the colonial and early national periods. The volume includes nine essays by scholars of American history and education, an illustrated catalogue of the 2006 exhibition prepared by the University of Pennsylvania Libraries, and a photographic essay of surviving colonial era schools buildings in the Delaware Valley. Contributors to the volume include Michael Zuckerman, William C. Kashatus, John C. Van Horne, Patrick Erben, Carla Mulford, George Boudreau, Mark Frazier Lloyd, Ira Harkavy, Lee Benson, and Matthew Hartley. The book was the 2010 winner of the MARAC Arline Custer Memorial Award book award.

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The Image Affair: Dreyfus in the Media, 1894-1906

Edited by André Dombrowski

Related Exhibition: The Image Affair: Dreyfus in the Media, 1894-1906, 2015

The Image Affair examines the infamous wrongful conviction for treason, and eventual exoneration, of Jewish officer Alfred Dreyfus as it played out in the French media at the turn of the last century. Encompassing the full range of the period's print culture including the illustrated press, broadsheets, photography, postcards, films, and even board games, the exhibition draws almost entirely from the Lorraine Beitler Collection of the Dreyfus Affair at Penn, one of the largest such collections in the world. This full-color illustrated catalog contains expanded essays on each section of the 2015 Penn Libraries exhibition. 2016 winner of the RBMS Leab Exhibition Award (Division Two)

No longer available

Life During Wartime: Penn at Home and Abroad During the Great War

Edited by Nick Okrent and Rebecca Stuhr

Related Exhibition: Life During Wartime: Penn at Home and Abroad During the Great War, 2018

Life During Wartime commemorates the 100th anniversary of the armistice ending the hostilities of World War I. It explores the varied experiences, both positive and negative, of University of Pennsylvania students, faculty, and alumni during the years of the war, 1914 through 1918. The accompanying catalogue includes an illustrated exhibition checklist and the essays: "Life During Wartime: Penn at Home and Abroad During the Great War," by Nick Okrent; "Who Belongs? Life in Philadelphia During the First World War," by Rebecca Stuhr; "'Nioc!! Nioc-Nioc!': Paul Philippe Cret, Penn's Poilu-Professor, and World War I," by Alisa Chiles; and "R. Tait McKenzie and the Science of Preparing and Reclaiming World War I Soldiers," by John F. Ditunno, Jr.

No longer available

Making the Renaissance Manuscript: Discoveries from Philadelphia Libraries

By Nicholas Herman 

Related Exhibition: Making the Renaissance Manuscript: Discoveries from Philadelphia Libraries 

Making the Renaissance Manuscript examines the making of the handwritten and hand-illuminated book during a time of great political, religious, and technological transformation in Europe. This catalogue explores the full intellectual and artistic depth of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries through a selection of extraordinary manuscripts, cuttings, and incunables, from the Philadelphia region. This scholarly catalogue showcases the wonderfully diverse collections of Philadelphia institutions, as well as the research discoveries made during the course of the Bibliotheca Philadelphiensis regional cataloguing and digitization project. 

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Manuscript Studies: A Journal of the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies

Various Authors 

Manuscript Studies is a journal that embraces the full complexity of global manuscript studies in the digital age. Its main goals are to bridge the gaps between material and digital manuscript research; to break down the walls that often separate print and digital publication and serve as barriers between academics, professionals in the cultural heritage field, and citizen scholars; to serve as a forum for scholarship encompassing many pre-modern manuscripts cultures—not just those of Europe; and to showcase methods and techniques of analysis in manuscript studies that can be applied across different subject areas. 

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From Mulberry Leaves to Silk Scrolls

Related Symposia: Writing the East: History and New Technologies in the Study of Asian Manuscript Traditions, 2011

While European manuscripts have been the subject of numerous historical, philological, and art historical studies over the past three decades, the study of the material culture of Asian (Buddhist, Hindu, Islamic, Taoist, and the like) manuscript traditions remains a relatively unexplored field. But Asian manuscripts, as the contributors to From Mulberry Leaves to Silk Scrolls demonstrate, contain much more than the semantic meaning of the words they reproduce. The ten essays collected here look closely at a wide variety of manuscript traditions with a special focus on both their history and the ways in they can be studied through digital technology to make the cataloging, comparative analysis, and aesthetic appreciation of them more accessible to scholars and students.

No longer available

Ok, I'll Do It Myself: Narratives of Intrepid Women in the American Wilderness. Selections from the Caroline F. Schimmel Collection

Related Exhibition: Ok, I'll Do It Myself: Narratives of Intrepid Women in the American Wilderness. Selections from the Caroline F. Schimmel Collection, 2018

A fully illustrated catalogue of the exhibition's selection of books, photographs, manuscripts, and memorabilia by one hundred and one women and one man, dating from 1682 to 2015, reflects the sweep of women's experiences in the American wilderness. Items range from Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium (1705), Maria Sibylla Merian's monumental study of the flora and fauna of Surinam to sharpshooter and entertainer Annie Oakley's travel trunk and gloves, and a souvenir envelope with a one-inch red heart through which she shot from a distance of twenty feet. 2018 revised, second edition.

No longer available

Reactions: Medieval/Modern

By Dot Porter

Reactions: Medieval/Modern explores the many and varied ways that people have reacted to, and acted upon, manuscripts from the Middle Ages up to today. Reactions take many forms. They include the manipulation of physical objects through, for example, the marking up of texts, addition of illustrations, the disbinding books or rebinding fragments, as well as the manipulation of digital objects, thanks to new technologies involved in digitization, ink and parchment analysis, virtual reconstruction, among many other processes. This volume includes an introduction by Dot Porter, essays by Bruce Holsinger, Erik Kwakkel, Kathryn M. Rudy, Michael Livingston, Angela Bennett, and an exhibition checklist.

No longer available

Reading Pictures: Sixteenth-Century European Illustrated Books

By Daniel Traister

Related Exhibition: Reading Pictures: Sixteenth-Century European Illustrated Books, 2010

This exhibition surveys European book illustration during the sixteenth century from Penn's rich collections. Their wide variety of styles and subjects illuminate what early modern book illustrators provided readers in an environment visually far less rich than the one we take for granted. Religion, labor, science, warfare, costume, medicine, portraits, exotic places, and more—all these topics found their way not only into words but also into pictures.

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Renaissance City Views from Above and Afar

Curated by Daniel Traister and Jack Sosiak

Related Exhibition: Renaissance City Views from Above and Afar, 2011

Between 1572 and 1617, Georg Braun, editor, and Franz Hogenberg, engraver, produced the Civitates Orbis Terrarum, a multi-volume collection of views of cities of the world published to complement the first modern atlas, Abraham Ortelius' Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, a map collection first published in 1570. A selection from collector Jack Sosiak's large group of Braun and Hogenberg's city views are exhibited.

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Our Beloved Country: Civil War Pamphlets Published in Philadelphia

By Jon Shaw 

Related Exhibition: The Civil War: An Ephemeral Lens Into the Life and Times, 2015-2016

This collection of pamphlets published in Philadelphia during and immediately after the Civil War provides fresh perspectives on the views of urban Union supporters. From the challenge to political liberties, to the future of freed slaves, to the medical treatment of soldiers, these accounts provide contemporary points of view from this time of national crisis and reform. Pamphlets in this volume have been selected from the collections of the University of Pennsylvania Libraries and are reproduced as high-quality facsimiles. 

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Prehistoric Wessex: Towards a Deep Map

By David Platt, Kathryn Schaeffer, and Jon Shaw

Related Exhibition: Prehistoric Wessex: Towards a Deep Map, 2013

A full-color illustrated catalog, published to accompany the exhibition Prehistoric Wessex: Towards a Deep Map. This exhibit brings together material from Penn's collections to represent a palimpsest of the ideas, images, and descriptions around the monuments that informed Thomas Hardy's worldview; it is the beginnings of a deep map of the region, in the tradition of writers such as Wallace Stegner and William Least Heat Moon. It incorporates material from the pre-antiquarian chronicles to the present day, including the technical studies of the monuments made by antiquarians and early archaeologists, poetic interpretations of the landscape in literature and art, and the reimagination of prehistoric Wessex in popular culture (e.g., in cartoons, film, and television).

No longer available

Taxonomies of Knowledge Information and Order in Medieval Manuscripts

Related Symposia: 5th Annual Lawrence J. Schoenberg Symposium on Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age, 2012

The period from the late twelfth through fifteenth centuries was an age of information in western Europe, and like today's electronic databases, medieval manuscripts helped readers access, process, and analyze information. Taxonomies of Knowledge: Information and Order in Medieval Manuscripts considers the role of the manuscript book in organizing and classifying knowledge. The collection's six essays demonstrate how the technologies of the book, including the types of material used, choices of textual arrangement, format, script, layout, decoration, and overall design, make it possible to determine what medieval readers and writers thought information was, what they determined was useful to know, and through which categories they decided it could be transmitted effectively to others. This collection was the 2014 winner of the MARAC Arline Custer Memorial Award book award.

No longer available

Wharton Esherick and the Birth of the American Modern

Edited by Paul Eisenhauer and Lynne Farrington 

Related Exhibition: Wharton Esherick and the Birth of the American Modern, 2011 (Archived)

An exploration of Wharton Esherick's artistic evolution during the early decades of the twentieth century. Based on the 2010-2011 exhibition in the Kamin and Kroiz Galleries of the University of Pennsylvania, this catalog includes over 300 images as well as an essay by Paul Eisenhauer, Curator of the Wharton Esherick Museum, expanding upon the exhibition's themes. 

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Wise Men Fished Here: A Centennial Exhibition in Honor of the Gotham Book Mart

By David Mcknight 

Related Exhibition: Wise Men Fished Here, 2019 

Wise Men Fished Here is a fully illustrated exhibition catalogue about the legendary New York City Gotham Book Mart founded by Frances Steloff in 1920. For decades the Gotham Book Mart was, as Steloff prosaically put it, “the headquarters of the avant-garde.” The volume explores the shop’s role in assembling, publishing, and promoting groundbreaking experimental writers, as well as its later years under the ownership of Steloff's hand-chosen successor, Andreas Brown, focusing on Brown’s passion for postcards and collaborations with graphic artist Edward Gorey. It includes expanded essays that explore the themes of the exhibition, historical background about the bookstore, and a bibliography of Gotham Book Mart publications. 

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Wonders of the Microscope!

Related Exhibition: Wonders of the Microscope, 2012

Drawing upon the collection of Howard L. and Karen Schwartz, Wonders of the Microscope! explores the revolution in observational science facilitated by the invention of the microscope in the late 1600s. It also emphasizes the ways in which the microscope entered popular culture over the following centuries. With a preface by Dr. Eugene S. Flamm.

No longer available

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