The process
of making our books taught me so much about a subject that I had previously
known very little about. We were able to go through the outdated process of
making a book that the people in the 1700’s went through in order to publish
books. We were taught the process of making paper, binding a book, setting
type, and using a Benjamin press. All of these are things that I had previously
known nothing about and never dreamed of being able to do. The reason I showed
interest in this particular seminar is that I really love objects with history
and a story behind them which made this class about historical books and the
method to make them so interesting to me.
On the last day of class, Dr.
Samuelson gave us a parting speech that asked us to think about the future of
books. With the growing popularity of Nooks and EBooks, paper books may one day
be deemed obsolete, and bookstores will go out of business much like the movie
rental business. I had previously thought about this topic and had even written
about it earlier in the year on the seminar’s blog page, but I have thought
about it much more now. In some ways, not having the traditional books could be
useful such as not having to spend hundreds of dollars on college books and
instead paying much less for online books. Online books would also never go out
of stock like the traditional paper books do. After making our books from
scratch though, I have come to respect paper books so much more and understand
their significance. Books contain within them secrets of the past that EBooks
could never have. If I wrote my name and the year I made it on my book I made
and someone a hundred years from now picked it up, they would know who owned
that book and around when it was made. Every mistake I had made in making the
book would be evident, but these mistakes would give the book character. Uneven
binding would help distinguish my book from my fellow classmate’s similar
copies. These differences are what make books so important to history. We have
studied again and again historical books in class that, through the seal
stamped on the inside cover or the opinions of a past reader on the margins of
the book, we can trace the history of the book and know its story. I have come
to learn that if traditional paper books disappear then a large part of history
might as well.
In all, I greatly enjoyed this
seminar. It not only taught me an amazingly awesome (if outdated) skill, but it
also taught me how very important books are to our history.