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Exhibition University
of Pennsylvania Library
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Writing
Surfaces: The Matter of Texts With Special Faculty Panel: What Is a Book? Launching the Year of the Book at the Penn Humanities Forum, Writing Surfaces is a special University of Pennsylvania Library exhibition—an encyclopedic tour of the myriad surfaces humans have used to communicate meaning. From sticks, stones, and bones to papers, metals, and plastics, the human imagination has proliferated an almost limitless supply of surfaces for texts and information. A panel of distinguished Penn faculty—Peter Stallybrass of English, Shane Butler of Classical Studies, and Millicent Marcus of Italian Studies—opens the exhibition with a discussion of what it means to call something a book. From Michael Ryan, Director When we think of writing, we invariably think of paper—
even now in the electronic age. Yet, during the six or so millennia since
the appearance of writing, man has been nothing if not fertile in leaving
his marks on things. From The exhibit makes no claims of exhaustiveness; rather
it is meant to suggest something of the range and variety of writing surfaces
from antiquity to the present. It is offered as a material context for
the Penn Humanities Forum’s Year of the Book. It is also
offered as a challenge, a provocation to take seriously the material bases
of texts and communication. Talk may be cheap, but writing (largely) endures.
However, it endures in different ways, in different genres, on different
surfaces. What is the relationship between text and surface? Between the
recording and the recorded? Why, finally, are artifacts of writing important?
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Writing Surfaces Clay... Stone... Parchment...
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