Archive for the ‘Senate House Library’ Category

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The Benefits of Reading, According to Ms Dutton and Mr de la Mare

April 15, 2013

Here’s Ellen Dutton‘s latest Stop Motion animation, on the benefits of reading. I thought it would be nice to set this alongside some of the thoughts Walter de la Mare shared in his anthologies for young people. Here’s an extract from Come Hither, a book of poems and prose extracts he published for young people in 1923, which was republished again as recently as 1990:

That is one of the pleasures of reading – you may make any picture out of the words you can and will; and a poem may have as many different meanings as there are different minds. (p. xxv-xxvi).

And these are from the introduction he and Thomas Quayle gave to their Readings of 1927:

That is really what it comes to: there is not really time enough in our short lives, with so much to be done, to waste much of it or our minds on what will not prove of lasting joy and use and service to them. (p. xx).

One simply cannot pay too much attention to what we see around us and in particular to living and beautiful things. And more especially when we are young. If possible, then, when you read about anything in a book, see it as clearly as you can in your own mind; then do your best to find that thing in the world around; then compare it with what the writer has said about it. Make your own discoveries. Explore! (p. xx)

A good book, indeed, is the next best thing in this life to a true friend. It gives all it has to give solely for the asking – and wants nothing in return but just a thankful blessing on the man who wrote it. (p. xxi).

The methods of information literacy for young people may have changed, but the sentiments are very much the same. As de la Mare and Quayle put it, “To be able to read is to be able to explore – as far as we will and can – the World of Books.” (p. xvii). Capital ‘W’, capital ‘B’.

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Day of DH: Catching the Last of the Day

April 8, 2013

N.B. This is a reposting of part of my Day of DH blog.

SH

So that was the main part of my day today. Pretty traditional and almost entirely analog. I barely even used a computer, and when I did it was only for email, wordprocessing and blogging.

After leaving the library, I had two main meetings: one with a student discussing a couple of job applications she is making and one discussing the latest installation planned at UCL by The Itinerant Poetry Library.

Any day that involves The Librarian is a good day in my book (pun intended).

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Image: late afternoon sun on the way out of Senate House.

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Day of DH: A Day in the Sterling Library

April 8, 2013

N.B. This is a reposting of part of my Day of DH blog.

Sterling LibrarySo this is where I spent the bulk of the day. I’m working on a paper for the Researching the Reading Experience conference. I’ve been working through de la Mare’s essay collection Pleasures and Speculations (Faber, 1940) and examining copies of books remaining in his Working Library for evidence of reading. I’m starting to get a sense of his virtual library – books that we can infer he owned or had access to but which are not extant in the books designated his working collection.

Pleasures and Speculations is a useful case study, as it contains essays he reworked, all about books he loved, and far from finding copies of each work he mentions, coverage is patchy and either early (books dating from before the turn of the century) or late (books published 2-3 years before 1940 – i.e. the time period in which he would have been reworking the earlier versions of the essays).

One of the main purposes of my overall work on the de la Mare library is to test the limits to which we can push different bibliographic methods. In this paper I’m testing inferences around the virtual library to the max. Which is lots of fun … and something of which I hope de la Mare, who was a prolific book reviewer, would have approved.

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Image: the Sterling Library, home to Senate House Library’s Historic Collections Reading Room and its Palaeography and Book Studies Collections.

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