Book review of Leah Price's book, Unpacking My Library: Writers and Their Books, examining its tension between a sentimental attachment to collections of well-used books and serious reflection on the meaning of personal libraries. The review draws out the impliclations for the book art field and areas ripe for further analysis
Book review of A Feeling for Books: The Book-of-the-Month Club, Literary Taste, and Middle- Class De...
Through a series of short interrelated reflections on every aspect of writing, reading and publishin...
Review of Peter Mendelsund's, What We See When We Read, a book about the phenomenology of reading an...
In this short essay, the author uses Walter Benjamin's 'Unpacking My Library' to explore the social ...
Review of Jessica Pressman, Bookishness: Loving Books in a Aigital Age. New York: Columbia Universit...
The Library Book has excerpts from 23 of the UK’s most notable writers, including Zadie Smith, Julia...
Established for over two decades, archive studies have often conflated the archive and the library, ...
This study examines the experience of literary reading as an example of document work. It launches f...
This article is written from the perspective of an art book publisher, in this case the executive di...
The article discusses the personal library of the author. Her collection includes books in three mai...
Though people are admonished not to judge a book by its cover, they often do. In order to better und...
Book review of Battles, Matthew. Library: An Unquiet History. W.W. Norton, New York, NY, 2003. $24.9...
The multiple lives of a blank book (ed. Yvan Martinez and Joshua Trees) was exhibited in Bookness: 1...
Review of The Thing The Book: A Monument to the Book as Object edited John Herschend & Will Roga...
The purpose of this project is to demonstrate value of the book as art and to highlight the power of...
Book review of A Feeling for Books: The Book-of-the-Month Club, Literary Taste, and Middle- Class De...
Through a series of short interrelated reflections on every aspect of writing, reading and publishin...
Review of Peter Mendelsund's, What We See When We Read, a book about the phenomenology of reading an...
In this short essay, the author uses Walter Benjamin's 'Unpacking My Library' to explore the social ...
Review of Jessica Pressman, Bookishness: Loving Books in a Aigital Age. New York: Columbia Universit...
The Library Book has excerpts from 23 of the UK’s most notable writers, including Zadie Smith, Julia...
Established for over two decades, archive studies have often conflated the archive and the library, ...
This study examines the experience of literary reading as an example of document work. It launches f...
This article is written from the perspective of an art book publisher, in this case the executive di...
The article discusses the personal library of the author. Her collection includes books in three mai...
Though people are admonished not to judge a book by its cover, they often do. In order to better und...
Book review of Battles, Matthew. Library: An Unquiet History. W.W. Norton, New York, NY, 2003. $24.9...
The multiple lives of a blank book (ed. Yvan Martinez and Joshua Trees) was exhibited in Bookness: 1...
Review of The Thing The Book: A Monument to the Book as Object edited John Herschend & Will Roga...
The purpose of this project is to demonstrate value of the book as art and to highlight the power of...
Book review of A Feeling for Books: The Book-of-the-Month Club, Literary Taste, and Middle- Class De...
Through a series of short interrelated reflections on every aspect of writing, reading and publishin...
Review of Peter Mendelsund's, What We See When We Read, a book about the phenomenology of reading an...