
Original photo by Horia Varlan
Friday, October 29, 2010
Radcliffe Gymnasium, 10 Garden Street, Radcliffe Yard
Registration is required.
Post-conference Coverage
News
“The Book of Clouds” (Boston Phoenix)
As books turn into data and tweets are archived for posterity, how will readers and academics cope with the detritus of a digital age?
“Why Books?” (Harvard Gazette)
Harvard is field of battle for print’s fate in a digital age
“The Whither and Why of Books” (Harvard Gazette)
Conference examines the place of venerable, vulnerable print in a rapidly evolving digital future
"What Books Are For" (Harvard Magazine)
"Why Books?" conference emphasizes the functions of books—what books do and what is done to them
Blogs
Early Modern On-line Bibliography
PhiloBiblos
Harvard University Press
Summaries
“Why Books?” conference and site visits summaries
Description
“Why Books?” will bring together speakers from a variety of disciplines—from literature and history to sociology and computer science—to probe the form and function of the book in a rapidly changing media ecology. Although cultural commentators today speak of “the book” as if it were a well-defined term, its boundaries have been and remain shifting and porous; therefore, one aim of this conference is to expose the complexities and internal contradictions of the “before” against which the digital-era “after” is defined.
In order to look forward to the future(s) of the book, the conference will open with a dialogue on the public-policy implications of new media forms, looking in particular at Harvard’s own response to current technological, legal, and commercial developments. The three panels that follow will explore some of the major functions that we identify with books today: production and diffusion (of texts and images, of knowledge and information); storage and retrieval (of widely varying content in different media and genres); and reception and use (including, but by no means limited to, reading).
“Why Books?” main page
Site Visits
Article: “Why Books? Why Not?”
Schedule and Speakers
Friday, October 29, 2010
| 9 a.m. |
Welcome Remarks Barbara J. Grosz, Dean, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study; Higgins Professor of Natural Sciences, Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences |
| 9:15 a.m. |
Opening Conversation: “Future Formats of Texts: E–books and Old Books” Moderator: Panelists: |
| 10 a.m. |
Break |
| 10:30 a.m. |
Session I: “Storage and Retrieval” Moderator: Panelists: Matthew G. Kirschenbaum, Associate Professor of English and Associate Director of the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities, University of Maryland |
| Noon |
Break |
| 1:15 p.m. |
Session II: “Circulation and Transmission” Moderator: Panelists: Meredith L. McGill, Associate Professor of English and Director of the Center for Cultural Analysis, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey |
| 2:45 p.m. |
Break |
| 3:15 p.m. |
Session III: “Reception and Use” Moderator: Panelists: Elizabeth Long, Department Chair and Professor of Sociology, Rice University |
| 4:45 p.m. |
Closing Remarks and Discussion Moderator: Discussant: |
A reception will follow the conference.
Speakers' Biographies
See the "Why Books?" speakers' biographies page.
“Why Books?” main page
Site Visits
Article: “Why Books? Why Not?”
