私人图书馆:国内图书室的建筑与陈设史

IF 1.4 3区 管理学 Q2 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
Mandy Webster
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Woudhuysen, cover the history of books in greater detail but do not discuss architecture or benefit from as many floor plans and illustrations as Byers’s book. Book collecting is well provided for, with books ranging from the more practical ABC for Book Collectors by John Carter through to the more anecdotal A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books by Nicholas A. Basbanes, with accounts of collectors prepared to go to any length, including murder, to satisfy their book lust. Few examine the physical structures of the libraries housing these collections and trace the evolution of their furnishings as Byers does. The books which do examine the architecture of libraries tend to have a narrower focus than Byers, for example, the more lavishly illustrated The Most Beautiful Libraries of the World by Jacques Bosser and Guillaume de Laubier and the more unwieldy The World’s Most Beautiful Libraries by Massimo Listri, which has many more sumptuous photographs but little explanatory text. Others favor specific periods and locations, such as The Country House Library and The Big House Library in Ireland: Books in Ulster Country Houses, both by Mark Purcell. The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland, edited by Peter Hoare, dedicates three volumes to the history of collecting, organizing, and housing libraries in these countries and how they were influenced by other countries but devotes much less space to architecture than Byers. The closest alternative to Byers’s book would be The Library: A World History by James Campbell and Will Pryce, similarly based on personal visits to more than eighty libraries around the world and spanning ancient Mesopotamia to present-day Western libraries, but focusing more on photographic evidence without the same explanatory detail as Byers. None cover furnishings in as much detail as Byers’s appendices C and D or provide such detailed floor plans to aid in imagining the scale and layout of library environments from Roman times to the present. Attention to detail in each chapter includes where and how high windows were situated and whether they would face courtyards, gardens, or water features to provide an impression of the lighting. This enables the reader to envision what it would be like to use the libraries featured.Byers ambitiously guides the reader around the world and through many centuries without inflicting a dull sentence. A mainly chronological tour opens with the early libraries of Sumer and Babylon in chapter 1, speculating on how it would have felt to stand in a tiny room of clay tablets. In the second chapter Byers introduces his idea of a type-one library in Egypt and classical Greece, based on storage in a small space filled with boxes or chests, evolving to type-two libraries of the Roman Republic with small rooms lined with shelving, eventually becoming larger rooms with cabinets in recesses in the Roman Empire.Byers cogently argues that the evolution of the architecture and furnishing of libraries is clearly a reaction to the evolution of books, from the early clay tablets in baskets to mobile libraries housed in boxes used to transport small personal collections of scrolls to the more familiar shelving of bound books with spines facing outward. In chapters 5 and 6, covering medieval and Renaissance libraries, Byers suggests that gorgeous examples of the bookbinders’ art required new ways to store and display these precious gems, leading to the use of lecterns even in private homes. He provides a useful table of the size of private libraries, from those of monarchs and aristocratic individuals to commoners such as Chaucer and the small, private, professional collections of lawyers and physicians.Chapter 7 covers libraries in China, Japan, India, and Africa, although there are references to the influences of Eastern libraries in the chapters on Western libraries. Byers highlights differences such as Chinese private libraries tending to be more visible in public parts of homes, while in Japan they would be hidden away and much more private.Chapter 8, on English country house libraries, covers what is clearly one of Byers’s favorite periods and serves as an introduction to the fuller treatment in the following three chapters, where he describes and illustrates individual country house libraries. His focus is on wealthy individuals with space to build large houses and furnish them on a lavish scale. Byers suggests library environments evolved in reaction to societal changes and served as places for individuals or single families to study, read, and entertain chosen guests in physical comfort in ways unknown in public libraries. Small home libraries suited the need for privacy and, when reading was aloud, avoided irritating other household members. Once silent reading became accepted practice, larger communal reading areas flourished. He suggests private libraries began to look like public libraries and were used to flaunt the owner’s erudition and wealth. When books became expensive rarities exclusive to the wealthiest, private libraries retreated to the most private parts of homes. In chapter 9 Byers provides evidence that once printing presses and improved literacy extended the pleasures of reading to a wider audience, larger home libraries developed to satisfy seventeenth-century scholars’ needs; this chapter devotes more space to discussing furniture such as desks and library chairs. Byers suggests that ever taller shelving required ingenious solutions to reaching books safely, from library steps to metamorphic chairs. He notes that libraries moved to more public areas of houses, sometimes as waiting areas or shared spaces for entertainment such as music. Dual functions of quiet study and housing the family literature separated again, with small personal studies often adjoining larger libraries. Byers cites improvements in travel as leading to owners gleaning ideas for improving their own libraries, either from grand tours and public libraries or from house parties and more immediately relevant architecture.Buyers uses chapter 12 to look at the private libraries of the less wealthy but quickly reverts to grand houses such as Harewood. In chapter 13 he demonstrates that contemporary libraries generally resemble those of the eighteenth century, apart from a few notable arts and crafts examples. His illustrations focus on modern wealthy individuals’ private libraries. The final chapter looks at the effects of digitalization; Byers argues physical library spaces will not be entirely otiose, as minimum workspace furniture will still be required even for accessing digital texts, and cites evidence of a resurgence in the popularity of reading physical books as relief from digital screens and as aesthetically pleasing objects requiring somewhere to be stored and displayed.Color illustrations contribute to the pleasure of reading this book and sit as convenient examples beside the relevant parts of the text. The author has devoted a great amount of careful research, evident from the extensive list of works cited and anecdotes of personal visits, to provide evocative descriptions reminding readers to contemplate what these libraries would have been like when new and how it feels to be guided through them now. Thoughtfully, the author not only describes private libraries and shares gorgeous illustrations but also describes his delightful concept of how it feels to be “book-wrapt.”The Private Library is a rare achievement of informing interested amateurs without condescension while also offering valuable insights to librarians. The author captures and shares the emotional engagement of library owners and their satisfaction simply in walking into their libraries and browsing familiar titles. His theory that even modest homes can enjoy a library, for example in a spare bedroom, but it is the furnishing which distinguishes the right to call that room a library, forms the basis of his book. 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He is a member of the Grolier Club in New York and is vice president of the Baxter Society. He has directed or curated eighteen book exhibitions, and his publications include work on library archaeology. All of which appears to have provided the perfect grounding for writing The Private Library.Other titles, such as The Oxford Companion to the Book by Michael F. Suarez and H. R. Woudhuysen, cover the history of books in greater detail but do not discuss architecture or benefit from as many floor plans and illustrations as Byers’s book. Book collecting is well provided for, with books ranging from the more practical ABC for Book Collectors by John Carter through to the more anecdotal A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books by Nicholas A. Basbanes, with accounts of collectors prepared to go to any length, including murder, to satisfy their book lust. Few examine the physical structures of the libraries housing these collections and trace the evolution of their furnishings as Byers does. The books which do examine the architecture of libraries tend to have a narrower focus than Byers, for example, the more lavishly illustrated The Most Beautiful Libraries of the World by Jacques Bosser and Guillaume de Laubier and the more unwieldy The World’s Most Beautiful Libraries by Massimo Listri, which has many more sumptuous photographs but little explanatory text. Others favor specific periods and locations, such as The Country House Library and The Big House Library in Ireland: Books in Ulster Country Houses, both by Mark Purcell. The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland, edited by Peter Hoare, dedicates three volumes to the history of collecting, organizing, and housing libraries in these countries and how they were influenced by other countries but devotes much less space to architecture than Byers. The closest alternative to Byers’s book would be The Library: A World History by James Campbell and Will Pryce, similarly based on personal visits to more than eighty libraries around the world and spanning ancient Mesopotamia to present-day Western libraries, but focusing more on photographic evidence without the same explanatory detail as Byers. None cover furnishings in as much detail as Byers’s appendices C and D or provide such detailed floor plans to aid in imagining the scale and layout of library environments from Roman times to the present. Attention to detail in each chapter includes where and how high windows were situated and whether they would face courtyards, gardens, or water features to provide an impression of the lighting. This enables the reader to envision what it would be like to use the libraries featured.Byers ambitiously guides the reader around the world and through many centuries without inflicting a dull sentence. A mainly chronological tour opens with the early libraries of Sumer and Babylon in chapter 1, speculating on how it would have felt to stand in a tiny room of clay tablets. In the second chapter Byers introduces his idea of a type-one library in Egypt and classical Greece, based on storage in a small space filled with boxes or chests, evolving to type-two libraries of the Roman Republic with small rooms lined with shelving, eventually becoming larger rooms with cabinets in recesses in the Roman Empire.Byers cogently argues that the evolution of the architecture and furnishing of libraries is clearly a reaction to the evolution of books, from the early clay tablets in baskets to mobile libraries housed in boxes used to transport small personal collections of scrolls to the more familiar shelving of bound books with spines facing outward. In chapters 5 and 6, covering medieval and Renaissance libraries, Byers suggests that gorgeous examples of the bookbinders’ art required new ways to store and display these precious gems, leading to the use of lecterns even in private homes. He provides a useful table of the size of private libraries, from those of monarchs and aristocratic individuals to commoners such as Chaucer and the small, private, professional collections of lawyers and physicians.Chapter 7 covers libraries in China, Japan, India, and Africa, although there are references to the influences of Eastern libraries in the chapters on Western libraries. Byers highlights differences such as Chinese private libraries tending to be more visible in public parts of homes, while in Japan they would be hidden away and much more private.Chapter 8, on English country house libraries, covers what is clearly one of Byers’s favorite periods and serves as an introduction to the fuller treatment in the following three chapters, where he describes and illustrates individual country house libraries. His focus is on wealthy individuals with space to build large houses and furnish them on a lavish scale. Byers suggests library environments evolved in reaction to societal changes and served as places for individuals or single families to study, read, and entertain chosen guests in physical comfort in ways unknown in public libraries. Small home libraries suited the need for privacy and, when reading was aloud, avoided irritating other household members. Once silent reading became accepted practice, larger communal reading areas flourished. He suggests private libraries began to look like public libraries and were used to flaunt the owner’s erudition and wealth. When books became expensive rarities exclusive to the wealthiest, private libraries retreated to the most private parts of homes. In chapter 9 Byers provides evidence that once printing presses and improved literacy extended the pleasures of reading to a wider audience, larger home libraries developed to satisfy seventeenth-century scholars’ needs; this chapter devotes more space to discussing furniture such as desks and library chairs. Byers suggests that ever taller shelving required ingenious solutions to reaching books safely, from library steps to metamorphic chairs. He notes that libraries moved to more public areas of houses, sometimes as waiting areas or shared spaces for entertainment such as music. Dual functions of quiet study and housing the family literature separated again, with small personal studies often adjoining larger libraries. Byers cites improvements in travel as leading to owners gleaning ideas for improving their own libraries, either from grand tours and public libraries or from house parties and more immediately relevant architecture.Buyers uses chapter 12 to look at the private libraries of the less wealthy but quickly reverts to grand houses such as Harewood. In chapter 13 he demonstrates that contemporary libraries generally resemble those of the eighteenth century, apart from a few notable arts and crafts examples. His illustrations focus on modern wealthy individuals’ private libraries. The final chapter looks at the effects of digitalization; Byers argues physical library spaces will not be entirely otiose, as minimum workspace furniture will still be required even for accessing digital texts, and cites evidence of a resurgence in the popularity of reading physical books as relief from digital screens and as aesthetically pleasing objects requiring somewhere to be stored and displayed.Color illustrations contribute to the pleasure of reading this book and sit as convenient examples beside the relevant parts of the text. The author has devoted a great amount of careful research, evident from the extensive list of works cited and anecdotes of personal visits, to provide evocative descriptions reminding readers to contemplate what these libraries would have been like when new and how it feels to be guided through them now. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

作家里德·拜尔斯(Reid Byers)不喜欢参观的重要私人图书馆几乎没有。这一个人经历激发了他对个人图书馆发展的迷人洞察力,并得到了他围绕这一主题的广泛阅读的支持,正如他在书末引用的大量作品所证明的那样。他的职业生涯包括C语言程序员、IT架构大师、记者和电视新闻播音员。他是纽约格罗里尔俱乐部的成员,也是巴克斯特协会的副主席。他指导或策划了18个书展,他的出版物包括图书馆考古学。所有这些似乎都为《私人图书馆》的写作提供了完美的基础。其他书籍,如Michael F. Suarez和h.r. Woudhuysen的《牛津图书指南》,更详细地介绍了书籍的历史,但没有讨论建筑,也没有像Byers的书那样从大量的平面图和插图中受益。这里为藏书提供了很好的条件,从约翰·卡特的《藏书家入门》到尼古拉斯·A·巴什班斯的《温和的疯狂:藏书家、藏书家和对书的永恒热情》,从更实用的书籍到更有趣的书籍,讲述了藏书家为了满足他们对书的渴望,不惜一切手段,包括谋杀。很少有人像拜尔斯那样研究图书馆收藏这些藏品的物理结构,并追踪其家具的演变。研究图书馆建筑的书往往比拜尔斯的书关注的范围更窄,例如,雅克·博瑟和纪尧姆·德·劳比尔的《世界上最美的图书馆》插图更丰富,马西莫·李斯特里的《世界上最美的图书馆》更笨拙,有很多华丽的照片,但很少有解释性的文字。还有一些人喜欢特定的时期和地点,比如马克·珀塞尔的《乡村别墅图书馆》和《爱尔兰的大房子图书馆:阿尔斯特乡村别墅的书》。由Peter Hoare编辑的《剑桥图书馆在英国和爱尔兰的历史》用三卷的篇幅讲述了这些国家图书馆的收集、组织和安置历史,以及它们是如何受到其他国家的影响的,但与拜尔斯相比,它在建筑方面的篇幅要少得多。与拜尔斯的书最接近的是詹姆斯·坎贝尔和威尔·普莱斯的《图书馆:世界历史》,同样是基于对世界各地80多家图书馆的个人访问,从古代的美索不达米亚到当今的西方图书馆,但更多地关注照片证据,没有拜尔斯那样的解释细节。没有哪本像拜尔斯的附录C和D那样详细地介绍了家具,也没有哪本像拜尔斯的附录C和D那样提供了如此详细的平面图,以帮助想象从罗马时代到现在的图书馆环境的规模和布局。每章对细节的关注包括窗户的位置和高度,以及它们是否面向庭院、花园或水景,以提供照明的印象。这使读者能够想象使用这些特色库会是什么样子。拜尔斯雄心勃勃地带领读者走遍世界,穿越多个世纪,却没有一句乏味的句子。在第一章中,一个主要按时间顺序的旅行从苏美尔和巴比伦的早期图书馆开始,猜测站在一个由泥板组成的小房间里会是什么感觉。在第二章中,拜尔斯介绍了他关于埃及和古典希腊的一类图书馆的想法,这种图书馆的基础是在一个充满盒子或箱子的小空间里储存,演变成罗马共和国的二类图书馆,小房间里有架子,最终成为罗马帝国的大房间,在凹槽里有橱柜。拜尔斯认为,图书馆建筑和布置的演变显然是对书籍演变的一种反应,从早期的篮子里的泥板,到装在盒子里的移动图书馆,用来运送个人收藏的小卷轴,再到我们更熟悉的书架,书架的书钉朝外。在涉及中世纪和文艺复兴时期图书馆的第5章和第6章中,拜耳指出,装订工的华丽艺术需要新的方法来储存和展示这些珍贵的宝石,这导致了甚至在私人住宅中也使用了讲台。他提供了一张有用的私人图书馆大小的表格,从君主和贵族个人到像乔叟这样的平民,再到律师和医生的小型私人专业收藏。第七章涵盖了中国、日本、印度和非洲的图书馆,尽管在章节中也提到了东方图书馆对西方图书馆的影响。拜尔斯强调了两国的不同之处,比如中国的私人图书馆往往在家里的公共场所更显眼,而在日本,它们会被隐藏起来,更加私密。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Private Library: The History of the Architecture and Furnishing of the Domestic Bookroom
There can be few significant private libraries the author Reid Byers has not enjoyed visiting. This personal experience enlivens his fascinating insight into the development of personal libraries and is supported by his wide reading around the subject, as evidenced in the extensive list of works cited at the end of his book. His career includes C language programmer, master IT architect, journalist, and TV newscaster. He is a member of the Grolier Club in New York and is vice president of the Baxter Society. He has directed or curated eighteen book exhibitions, and his publications include work on library archaeology. All of which appears to have provided the perfect grounding for writing The Private Library.Other titles, such as The Oxford Companion to the Book by Michael F. Suarez and H. R. Woudhuysen, cover the history of books in greater detail but do not discuss architecture or benefit from as many floor plans and illustrations as Byers’s book. Book collecting is well provided for, with books ranging from the more practical ABC for Book Collectors by John Carter through to the more anecdotal A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books by Nicholas A. Basbanes, with accounts of collectors prepared to go to any length, including murder, to satisfy their book lust. Few examine the physical structures of the libraries housing these collections and trace the evolution of their furnishings as Byers does. The books which do examine the architecture of libraries tend to have a narrower focus than Byers, for example, the more lavishly illustrated The Most Beautiful Libraries of the World by Jacques Bosser and Guillaume de Laubier and the more unwieldy The World’s Most Beautiful Libraries by Massimo Listri, which has many more sumptuous photographs but little explanatory text. Others favor specific periods and locations, such as The Country House Library and The Big House Library in Ireland: Books in Ulster Country Houses, both by Mark Purcell. The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland, edited by Peter Hoare, dedicates three volumes to the history of collecting, organizing, and housing libraries in these countries and how they were influenced by other countries but devotes much less space to architecture than Byers. The closest alternative to Byers’s book would be The Library: A World History by James Campbell and Will Pryce, similarly based on personal visits to more than eighty libraries around the world and spanning ancient Mesopotamia to present-day Western libraries, but focusing more on photographic evidence without the same explanatory detail as Byers. None cover furnishings in as much detail as Byers’s appendices C and D or provide such detailed floor plans to aid in imagining the scale and layout of library environments from Roman times to the present. Attention to detail in each chapter includes where and how high windows were situated and whether they would face courtyards, gardens, or water features to provide an impression of the lighting. This enables the reader to envision what it would be like to use the libraries featured.Byers ambitiously guides the reader around the world and through many centuries without inflicting a dull sentence. A mainly chronological tour opens with the early libraries of Sumer and Babylon in chapter 1, speculating on how it would have felt to stand in a tiny room of clay tablets. In the second chapter Byers introduces his idea of a type-one library in Egypt and classical Greece, based on storage in a small space filled with boxes or chests, evolving to type-two libraries of the Roman Republic with small rooms lined with shelving, eventually becoming larger rooms with cabinets in recesses in the Roman Empire.Byers cogently argues that the evolution of the architecture and furnishing of libraries is clearly a reaction to the evolution of books, from the early clay tablets in baskets to mobile libraries housed in boxes used to transport small personal collections of scrolls to the more familiar shelving of bound books with spines facing outward. In chapters 5 and 6, covering medieval and Renaissance libraries, Byers suggests that gorgeous examples of the bookbinders’ art required new ways to store and display these precious gems, leading to the use of lecterns even in private homes. He provides a useful table of the size of private libraries, from those of monarchs and aristocratic individuals to commoners such as Chaucer and the small, private, professional collections of lawyers and physicians.Chapter 7 covers libraries in China, Japan, India, and Africa, although there are references to the influences of Eastern libraries in the chapters on Western libraries. Byers highlights differences such as Chinese private libraries tending to be more visible in public parts of homes, while in Japan they would be hidden away and much more private.Chapter 8, on English country house libraries, covers what is clearly one of Byers’s favorite periods and serves as an introduction to the fuller treatment in the following three chapters, where he describes and illustrates individual country house libraries. His focus is on wealthy individuals with space to build large houses and furnish them on a lavish scale. Byers suggests library environments evolved in reaction to societal changes and served as places for individuals or single families to study, read, and entertain chosen guests in physical comfort in ways unknown in public libraries. Small home libraries suited the need for privacy and, when reading was aloud, avoided irritating other household members. Once silent reading became accepted practice, larger communal reading areas flourished. He suggests private libraries began to look like public libraries and were used to flaunt the owner’s erudition and wealth. When books became expensive rarities exclusive to the wealthiest, private libraries retreated to the most private parts of homes. In chapter 9 Byers provides evidence that once printing presses and improved literacy extended the pleasures of reading to a wider audience, larger home libraries developed to satisfy seventeenth-century scholars’ needs; this chapter devotes more space to discussing furniture such as desks and library chairs. Byers suggests that ever taller shelving required ingenious solutions to reaching books safely, from library steps to metamorphic chairs. He notes that libraries moved to more public areas of houses, sometimes as waiting areas or shared spaces for entertainment such as music. Dual functions of quiet study and housing the family literature separated again, with small personal studies often adjoining larger libraries. Byers cites improvements in travel as leading to owners gleaning ideas for improving their own libraries, either from grand tours and public libraries or from house parties and more immediately relevant architecture.Buyers uses chapter 12 to look at the private libraries of the less wealthy but quickly reverts to grand houses such as Harewood. In chapter 13 he demonstrates that contemporary libraries generally resemble those of the eighteenth century, apart from a few notable arts and crafts examples. His illustrations focus on modern wealthy individuals’ private libraries. The final chapter looks at the effects of digitalization; Byers argues physical library spaces will not be entirely otiose, as minimum workspace furniture will still be required even for accessing digital texts, and cites evidence of a resurgence in the popularity of reading physical books as relief from digital screens and as aesthetically pleasing objects requiring somewhere to be stored and displayed.Color illustrations contribute to the pleasure of reading this book and sit as convenient examples beside the relevant parts of the text. The author has devoted a great amount of careful research, evident from the extensive list of works cited and anecdotes of personal visits, to provide evocative descriptions reminding readers to contemplate what these libraries would have been like when new and how it feels to be guided through them now. Thoughtfully, the author not only describes private libraries and shares gorgeous illustrations but also describes his delightful concept of how it feels to be “book-wrapt.”The Private Library is a rare achievement of informing interested amateurs without condescension while also offering valuable insights to librarians. The author captures and shares the emotional engagement of library owners and their satisfaction simply in walking into their libraries and browsing familiar titles. His theory that even modest homes can enjoy a library, for example in a spare bedroom, but it is the furnishing which distinguishes the right to call that room a library, forms the basis of his book. This is worthy of shelf space in any library, private or public.
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来源期刊
College & Research Libraries
College & Research Libraries INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
22.20%
发文量
63
审稿时长
45 weeks
期刊介绍: College & Research Libraries (C&RL) is the official scholarly research journal of the Association of College & Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association, 50 East Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611. C&RL is a bimonthly, online-only publication highlighting a new C&RL study with a free, live, expert panel comprised of the study''s authors and additional subject experts.
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