H-40. The Printed Book in the West since 1800
Eric Holzenberg
Course Length: 30 hours
Course Week: 8–13 June 2025
Format: in person, University of Virginia in Charlottesville, VA
Fee: $1,495
This course will survey the technological advances in papermaking, illustration processes, composition, printing, binding, and distribution that fueled the development of the modern book industry. It will also give an overview of those phenomena—William Morris and the modern fine press movement, artists’ books, the rise of book-clubs and organized bibliophily—that have arisen to balance this industrialization. The class will make extensive use of books and periodicals embodying the advance of printing in the West since 1800, as well as the plates, tools, and other artifacts that enabled that advance. This course concludes the RBS sequence of history of the book courses, beginning with The Book in the Manuscript Era (H-20) and continuing with The Printed Book in the West to 1800 (H-30).
The course is intended for those with a strong native interest, but little formal study, in the art and history of the modern book. In their personal statement, applicants should describe the nature of their developing interest in the history of the book and (if relevant) explain briefly the causes of this interest and the purposes to which they propose to put the knowledge gained from the course.
Course History
Faculty
Eric Holzenberg
Eric Holzenberg is Director of the Grolier Club in New York City. He is the author of The Middle Hill Press (1997). He has taught a version of H-40 at RBS since 2001, and has also taught courses on rare book cataloging and rare book librarianship.
Courses Formerly Offered
- The Codex Book in the West, 500–2000 (1999, with Suzy Taraba)
- Rare Book Cataloging for Curators (1998, with Suzy Taraba)
- L-30. Rare Book Cataloging (1995–1997)