At the Association's annual meeting on 29 January 2005 at
the New York Public Library, G. Thomas Tanselle, president of the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia,
responded to the presentation of the award as follows:
I am delighted to accept APHA's Institutional Award for 2005 on
behalf of the council, staff, and membership of the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia.
The Society's latest accomplishments are owing to the devoted work of an
outstanding council and staff. Simply to list our councilors' names
indicates the quality of support that we enjoy: Terry Belanger, Ruthe
Battestin, Kathryn Morgan, David Seaman, David Vander Meulen, and Karin
Wittenborg. You will recognize from this roster that we are well
connected to the worlds of librarianship, physical bibliography,
literary scholarship, book collecting, and the electronic dissemination
of texts. And I cannot imagine a staff more congenial, involved, and
effective than ours, consisting of Elizabeth Lynch, assistant to the
editor of Studies in Bibliography, and
Anne Ribble, the secretary-treasurer. I bring you the gratitude of all
these people for the honor you have given us.
This year the Society is fifty-eight years old, and it is fortunate
to have had similar groups of complementary individuals looking after
its welfare from the beginning. I will not attempt on this occasion to
recount the history of the Society--which has in any case already been
admirably told by David Vander Meulen, in a volume that should be read
by all who are interested in the history of the book world in the
twentieth century. But I would like to name a few of the persons to
whom the Society has been most indebted over the years. The
interconnections among all parts of the world of books are strikingly
shown by the triumvirate that played the leading roles in the Society's
earliest days: Fredson Bowers, a literary scholar who became the
dominant figure in bibliographical and textual scholarship for the next
four decades (2005, by the way, is the centenary of his birth); Linton
R. Massey, an important collector whose financial support for the
Society was for many years crucial to its survival; and John Cook
Wyllie, a rare-book librarian whose insight into bibliographical
evidence inspired several generations of students and enriched the
collections of the University of Virginia Library.
Their worthy successors have included Irby B. Cauthen, Jr., Ray
Frantz, Julius Barclay, Anne Ehrenpreis, Walker Cowen, Mary Massey, and
three others that I want to single out for comment. One is John T.
Casteen, president of the University of Virginia, whose interest in the
work of the Society has led to financial support from the Alumni
Association. Another is Kendon Stubbs, a former president of the
Society and a long-time deputy university librarian, whose concern for
all aspects of our organization was indicative of the kind of
intelligence, both visionary and practical, that he brought to many
university endeavors--so many that in 1998 he was given the Thomas
Jefferson Award, the highest honor bestowed by the University of
Virginia. The third person is David Vander Meulen, Fredson Bowers's
successor in the Virginia English department and as editor of Studies in Bibliography, the annual volume
founded by Bowers as a Society publication in 1948. Vander Meulen, with
tireless dedication, has maintained the great tradition of this journal,
and he continues to duplicate this feat every year, along with
overseeing the Society's other publications and handling many additional
details as the Society's vice president.
From the beginning, the Society's publication program has been its
major activity, and the annual appearance of Studies in Bibliography quickly became, and has
remained, a major event in the international bibliographical world. The
mystique surrounding SB is suggested by Robin Myers's comment, on
the occasion of the Society's fiftieth anniversary, that this "very
special publication" causes "a yearly frisson of pleasure as it thuds
down on bibliographical doormats everywhere." Further recent indication
of the prominence of SB was the fact that it was one of five
scholarly journals selected for discussion in the latest "Learned
Journals" issue of the London Times Literary Supplement (5
November 2004), where David McKitterick noted that the journal is both
forward-looking and conscious of bibliographical history and biography.
The journal has always been international in its roll of contributors,
which has included many of the major scholars in the field, such as (to
name only a dozen) Fleeman, Foxon, Gaskell, Greg, Hinman, Kyriss,
McKenzie, Needham, Silver, Stevenson, Todd, and Alice Walker (plus
Bowers and Vander Meulen themselves). And the subject matter treated
has been similarly cosmopolitan, ranging from fifteenth-century European
books to twentieth-century American ones, from medieval manuscripts to
modern literary holographs, from the physical analysis of books (an area
in which SB holds a particularly historic place) to the theory
and practice of textual criticism and scholarly editing. The journal
has also published, from the start, articles dealing with book
publication and reception--the kind of work that now falls under the
rubric "history of the book." David Vander Meulen, besides continuing
this tradition, has increased the journal's attention to bibliographical
history, having recently published biographical studies of Bowers,
Stevenson, Fleeman, Foxon, and Ridolfi, as well as McKerrow's
unpublished 1928 Sandars Lectures, on the relation of Renaissance
printed books to authors' manuscripts, and Gordon N. Ray's unpublished
1985 Lyell Lectures on the Art Deco book in France (which still make a
significant contribution to their subject). (I might add,
parenthetically, that the unparochial nature of SB reflects the
diversity, both geographical and intellectual, of the Society's
membership, and indeed its leaders: my presidency, for instance,
symbolizes--since I have no connection with the University of
Virginia--the fact that the Society, despite its name, is more than a
local organization.)
If SB--or "Studies," as it is more often called within
the Society--is the centerpiece of the Society's publication program, it
is not the only element in our commitment to the dissemination of
scholarship. We take pride in the fact that the Society has published
over 175 other works, and I can give a flavor of what this
accomplishment amounts to by naming a few of the landmarks. Paul
Morrison in 1950 and 1955 published indexes to the printers, publishers,
and booksellers in the Pollard-Redgrave Short-Title Catalogue and
in Wing; Charles C. Mish brought out in 1967 his final version of a
listing of seventeenth-century English prose fiction; and Roger Bristol
published in 1970-71 the final revision of his supplement to Evans's
American Bibliography. Although Morrison's work was superseded
by the third volume of Pantzer's STC revision, and although all
three are now superseded by the electronic English Short-Title
Catalogue, they served a crucial function for many years. D. F.
McKenzie's Stationers' Company Apprentices, 1605-1640 (1961) was
the first book of this major bibliographical scholar; and Rollo G.
Silver's Typefounding in America, 1787-1825 (1965) and The
American Printer, 1787-1825 (1967) were the two main books of one of
the premier historians of American printing (and the second recipient of
an APHA Individual Award). B. C. Bloomfield's 1964 descriptive
bibliography of Auden, especially as revised with Edward Mendelson in
1972, is generally regarded as one of the models for twentieth-century
author bibliography (a cause also promoted by a series of descriptive
bibliographies named in honor of Linton Massey). A substantial
collection of Bowers's essays, published in 1975, has been one of the
Society's most often cited books. And two distinctive instances of the
responsible publication of facsimiles, which demonstrate the scholarly
contributions that can be made by such editions, are G. Blakemore
Evans's eight-volume series of Shakespearean Prompt-Books of the
Seventeenth Century (1960-96) and David Vander Meulen's
exemplary historical study of Pope's "Dunciad" of 1728
(1991).
In recent years the Society's publication program has taken full
advantage of the possibilities for electronic dissemination on the
internet. One of Kendon Stubbs's many services to the Society was to
get us started on this venture, and since then we have been expertly
assisted by David Seaman, Matthew Gibson, and the staff of Virginia's Electronic Text Center. We were able to announce, at the
Society's fiftieth-anniversary gala, that the full run of Studies in Bibliography was accessible to all
readers on the Society's website. I believe we can correctly claim that
SB is the first scholarly journal with a long run to be made
available in its entirety and free of charge on the internet. And it
can now be read in ebook form as
well. Our program of electronic publications includes not only other
previously published works but also new works, such as Emily Lorraine de
Montluzin's record of attributions of authorship in
the Gentleman's Magazine, and supplementary material to
accompany contributions to SB, such as the illustrations for Gordon Ray's study of the French
Art Deco book.
If the Society's influential presence in the bibliographical world
comes largely through its printed and electronic publications, it does
sponsor other activities for a local audience in Charlottesville. From
the beginning the Society has held a student book-collecting contest,
which now brings to the winners not only the monetary prizes provided by
the Society but also a number of gift certificates from booksellers, an
exhibition in the library, publicity in the newspapers, and a special
session with the curator of rare books--plus, for the first-place
winner, a tuition-free class in Terry Belanger's Rare Book School. The
Society's meetings in recent years have also recognized the importance
of encouraging bibliographical work among students. In alternating
years graduate students are asked to read papers on bibliographical and
textual subjects--and in the intervening years Virginia faculty members
report on their work in these areas.
This APHA award brings welcome attention to all these activities of
the Society. But there is one other aspect of the award that I want to
mention: that it comes from an organization with the word "history" in
its name. Some of the work supported by our Society would of course be
considered "history" under anyone's definition. That bibliographical
scholarship is necessarily historical scholarship, however, is not
always recognized. To me, this situation is epitomized by the fact that
listings of scholarship in book history rarely include work in
bibliographical analysis, even though such analysis has repeatedly
uncovered facts of printing history--facts that are just as much a part
of the full story of each book's life as are publishers' marketing
decisions and readers' responses. People sometimes have claimed that
analytical bibliography--that is, the activity of examining the
manufacturing clues present in printed artifacts like books and
ephemera--involves too much interpretation to result in solid facts,
such as those supposedly derived from archival records. The answer to
this claim is that the products of the printing press are part of the
archival record and that whatever difficulties they pose for
interpretation are matched by those present in other archives, such as
printers' and publishers' papers and ledgers.
Every category of surviving artifact requires informed judgment for
its decipherment, and what we call historical facts are always the
result of an interpretive process and thus subject to future refutation.
Much of what we wish to extrapolate from tangible evidence--and
therefore much of what we regularly call "history"--consists of past
events: that is, the actions and thoughts of particular individuals at
certain times. Reconstructing the activities of compositors and
pressmen on specific occasions (or, indeed, the intentions of authors at
specific times) is no different from the myriad other acts of
hypothesizing that historical knowledge is made of. We in the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia
are therefore particularly gratified that a printing history association
has again chosen to recognize the activities of a bibliographical
society, and we thank you very much.