Imagining the Architectures of the Book: Textual Scholarship and the Digital Book Arts

Abstract

Why should designers of digital reading environments study the history of the book? What can the continuities and discontinuities — the successes and failures — of new developments in the book’s long history teach us about its possible futures? Questions such as these often go unasked in commercial e-book design and other domains that emphasize technical inno- vation as their only criterion for evaluating the past. However, new reading environments challenge us to understand the role of material forms in meaning-making, and to situate e-books and digital reading devices within the changing history of books and reading. This article explores that rationale as embodied by the Architectures of the Book (ArchBook) project, an online, open-access, and peer-reviewed collection of richly illustrated essays about specific design features in the history of the book.

Description

Keywords

book history, design, bibliography, interface, e-books

Citation

Alan Galey, Jon Bath, Rebecca Niles, and Richard Cunningham. "Imagining the Architectures of the Book: Textual Scholarship and the Digital Book Arts." Textual Cultures 7.2 (2012): 20-42.

DOI

ISSN

1933-7418 1559-2936

Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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