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A.S.W. Rosenbach Lectures in Bibliography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The A.S.W. Rosenbach Lectures are an endowed lectureship in bibliography established in 1928 by rare-book and manuscript dealer A. S. W. Rosenbach at the University of Pennsylvania. [1]

The Rosenbach Lectures are the longest continuing series of bibliographical lectureships in the United States. Individuals appointed as Rosenbach Fellows present three lectures over several weeks.[2]
The 1971 A.S.W. Rosenbach Fellowship in Bibliography marked the Theodore Dreiser Centenary.[3]
The 1974 A.S.W. Rosenbach Fellowship in Bibliography was devoted to the fifth annual meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies."[4]
The university's Van Pelt-Dietrich Library Center in collaboration with their Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts are the current location of the lectures.
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Lecturers
The first Rosenbach Fellow was Christopher Morley in 1931 [5] whose lectures were published as Ex Libris Carissimis in 1932.[6] Many of the lectures have been published by the University of Pennsylvania Press, including Morley's, which was also part of the anniversary collection of the Press.[7] Other lecturers have included:
- Randolph Greenfield Adams, "Three Americanists"[8]
- Claude C. Albritton, "Toward the Discovery of Time: Landmarks in Historical Geology"[9]
- Nicolas Barker, "Things Not Reveal 'd: The Mutual Impact of Idea and Form in the Transmission of Poetry, 1500-2002"[10]
- Malachi Beit-Arié, "Unveiled Faces of Medieval Hebrew Books: The Evolution of Manuscript Production"[11]
- Terry Belanger, "The History of American Rare Book Libraries from 1876 to present"[12]
- John Bidwell, "Papermaking in the Delaware Valley at the end of the 18th & beginning of the 19th century."[13]
- Ann M. Blair, "Hidden Hands: Amanuenses and Authorship in Early Modern Europe."[14]
- Fredson Bowers, "On Editing Shakespeare & the Elizabethan Dramatists"[15]
- Clarence S. Brigham, "Journals & Journeymen: Studies in Early American Newspapers"[16]
- Curt F. Bühler, "Incunabula" and "The 15th Century Book"[17][18]
- Charles Burnett, "Arabic and Greek Science and Philosophy: Form and Style in the Transmission to the Latin West"
- Cass Canfield, "The Publishing Experience"[19]
- Mary Carruthers, "Cognitive Geometries: Using Diagrams in the Middle Ages"[20]
- William Charvat, "Literary Publishing in America 1790-1850"[21]
- Roger Chartier, "Forms and Meanings: Texts, Performances, and Audiences from Codex to Computer"[22]
- I. Bernard Cohen, "Words, Images & Ideas"[23]
- Robert Darnton, "The Devil in the Holy Water"[24][25]
- Elizabeth Eisenstein, "Divine Art / Infernal Machine: Western Views of Printing Surveyed"[26]
- Robert H. Elias, "Dreiser: Bibliography and the Biographer"[27]
- Bernhard Fabian, "Literacy & the Reading Public in the 18th century"[28]
- John Farquhar Fulton, "Great Medical Bibliographies: A study in Humanism"[29]
- Carlo Ginzberg, "Fossils, Apes, Humans: A Chapter in the History of Science, Revisited"[30]
- Anthony Grafton, "Books and the Magus: Johannes Trithemius 1462-1516"[31]
- James N. Green, "Book Publishing in Early America" [32]
- David D. Hall, "Pen and Press: Practices of Writing and Publishing in Colonial America"[33]
- Louis Hanke, "Bartolomi de Las Casas"[34]
- Anthony Hobson, "The Bibliomania: English Book Collecting in the Early Nineteenth Century"[35][36]
- Dard Hunter, "Oriental Papermaking, Early American Papermaking"[37]
- Matthew G. Kirschenbaum, "Bitstreams: The Future of Digital Literary Heritage"[38]
- Ludolf Kuchenbuch and Ivan Illich, "The History of Text: Three Dialogues"
- John Lievsay, "The Englishman 's Italian Books"[39]
- Alberto Manguel, "The Traveller, the Tower and the Worm"[40]
- Peter D. McDonald, "The Secret Life of Books"[41]
- James Gilmer McManaway, "Early English Literature"[42]
- Elizabeth McHenry, "Toward a History of Black Print"[43]
- A. Hyatt Mayor, "Prints & People"[44]
- Wolfgang Milde, "The Gospel of Henry the Lion"[45]
- C. William Miller, "From Holy Experiment to Revolution"[46]
- Dorothy Miner, "The Medieval Illustrated Book"[47][48]
- Ruth Mortimer, "L 'Art de Bien Batir: French 16th Century Architecture Books"[49]
- Paul Needham, "The First Quarter Century of European Printing."[50]
- A. Edward Newton, "Bibliography & Pseudo-Bibliography" [51]
- Stanley Pargellis, "Americana Collectors in Europe and England, 1600-1800"[52]
- Nicholas Pickwood, "The Uses of Bookbinding History"[53]
- Donald Pizer, "Dreiser 's Fiction: The Editorial Problem"[54]
- J. H. Powell, "The USA 1774-1816: A Bibliographical Study"[55]
- Leah Price, "Reading from Home.Reader ≠ inessential worker"[56]
- Janice Radway, "Books, Reading and the Struggle for Control of Literary Culture in the Age of Mass Production" [57]
- Richard H. Rouse, "The Development of Aids to Study in the 13th Century"[58]
- Paul Henry Saenger, "The Latin Bible as Codex"[59]
- George Sarton, "The Appreciation of Ancient and Medieval Science "in the Renaissance[60]
- Fred Schreiber, "The French-Scholar Printer of the Renaissance"[61][62][63]
- Leslie Shane, "Swift, Irish Books"[64]
- Peter Stallybrass, "Printing-for-Manuscript" [65]
- Brain Stock, "Minds, Bodies, Readers"[66]
- Michael F. Suarez, S.J. "Printing Abolition:How the Fight to Ban the British Slave Trade Was Won, 1783–1807"[67]
- G. Thomas Tanselle, "Tortured Stem and Tranquil Blossom: A Rationale of Textual Criticism"[68]
- Archer Taylor, "Subject Indexes"[69]
- Eric Gardner Turner, "Towards a Typology of the Early Codex"[70]
- Robert W. G. Vail, "Voice of the Old Frontier"[71]
- Michael Warner, "The Evangelical Public Sphere"[72]
- James L. W. West III, "The Profession of Authorship in America 1900-1950"[73]
- Roy McKeen Wilies [74]
- George Parker Winship, "John Gutenberg, 15th Century Printing, The Bay Psalm Book"[75]
- Kelly Wisecup."Indigenous Ecologies of the Page: Bibliography, Birchbark, and Remediation."[76]
- Edwin Wolf II, "Books and Bookmen of Colonial Philadelphia"[77]
- Richard J. Wolfe, "The Art of Marbling Paper & its relationship to Bookbinding in the West"[78]
- Louis Booker Wright, "Living Libraries"[79]
- Lawrence C. Wroth, "An American Bookshelf in 1755"[80]
- John Cook Wyllie, "Typefaces used in Books"[81]
- William Zachs, "Authenticity and Duplicity: Investigations into Multiple Copies of Books"[82][83]
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See also
References
External links
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