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What Is the History of the History of Books?
Joan Shelley Rubin
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Perhaps an emergent subdiscipline attains maturity at the moment
when its adherents assumeusually erroneouslythat their
colleagues outside the new field understand what it is all about.
By that measure, the history of the book has arrived. Early efforts
to explain the enterprise, such as Robert Darnton's classic 1982
article, "What Is the History of Books?," or to set agendas for
research, such as the 1984 American Antiquarian Society (
AAS
) conference, "Needs and Opportunities in the History of the Book,"
have evolved into flourishing institutions. The Society for the
History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing (
SHARP
), for example, attracts members both in the United States and abroad,
holds well-attended yearly meetings, runs an active online discussion
group, issues a newsletter, and publishes an annual journal, Book
History. Yet if students of print can now take pleasure in recognizing
each other by their name badges rather than by what Darnton called
"the glint in their eyes," it may be time to move beyond insiders'
exhilaration so that other Americanists can gain a sense of the
field's usefulness for their own work. The history of the history
of books presents an opportunity for those dealing with all sorts
of textsnot just literary or journalistic expression but also
laws, sermons, scientific papers, business manuals, or political
tractsto think anew about how such artifacts acquired their
particular shape and significance. It also invites historians to
stand back from familiar distinctions on which they have come to
rely, adopting a greater appreciation for ambiguity and flux as
historical forces.
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