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Lost Libraries: The Destruction of Great Book Collections Since Antiquity

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This pioneering volume of essays explores the destruction of great libraries since ancient times and examines the intellectual, political and cultural consequences of loss. Fourteen original contributions, introduced by a major re-evaluative history of lost libraries, offer the first ever comparative discussion of the greatest catastrophes in book history from Mesopotamia and Alexandria to the dispersal of monastic and monarchical book collections, the Nazi destruction of Jewish libraries, and the recent horrifying pillage and burning in Tibet, Bosnia and Iraq.

294 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2004

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About the author

James Raven

48 books24 followers
James Russell Raven (born 13 April 1959) is a British scholar specializing in the history of the book. His published works include The English Novel 1770-1829 (2000), The Business of Books (2007), and What is the History of the Book? (2018). As of 2019, he was Professor Emeritus of history at the University of Essex.

Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Caterina.
1,210 reviews64 followers
October 11, 2023
Twitter'da -şimdiki adı X galiba ama konumuz bu değil- bir kitap zincirinde görüp kızlarla "biz bunu okuyalım" dediğimiz bir eserdi. Sosyal mecraların böyle güzel şeylere vesile olduğu da oluyor deyip incelememe girişeyim.

Eser makalelerden oluşuyor ve her makale sonuna sağlam bir kaynakça eklenmiş. İçeriği merak edenler için makale adlarını da alta listeleyeceğim. Dil akıcı ve yorucu değil. Beni özellikle 12. makale Vilna'nın Kayıp Yahudi Kütüphaneleri ve Frankfurt Yahudi Sorununu Araştırma Enstitüsü ile 14. makale Çin'in Tibet Kütüphanelerini yok etmesi çok etkiledi.

15. ve son makale olan "Kitapları Yakın" altın vuruş niteliğindeydi. Fahrenheit 451'e yapılan gönderme nefisti.

İlk çağlardan beri kitaba siyasi ve kültürel bağlamda yaklaşımlar, kitaplıklar ve kitaplıkların sonu üzerine harika bir eser diyebilirim. Bu yüzden "okusanız seversiniz bence" kategorisinden tavsiyemdir.

MAKALE LİSTESİ

1 Giriş: Kayıpların Yarattığı Sarsıntı / James Raven

2 Eski Mezopotamya'nın Kayıp Kütüphaneleri / Jeremy Black

3 Aristo'nun "Gezgin" Kütüphanesi / T.Keith Dix

4 Metinden Ödüle: Regiomontanus'un Kütüphanesinin Simgelerini Değiştirmek / Richard L. Kremer

5 Corvina Kütüphanesi ve Kaybolan Macar Kraliyet Arşivi / Martyn Rady

6 El Yazması Kitap Biriktirme Alışkanlıkları: Gloucester Dükü Humfrey'in Kütüphanesinin Dağılması / David Rundle

7 'El Yazmaları Kelebekler Gibi Uçuşuyordu': Onaltıncı Yüzyılda İngiliz Kütüphanelerinin Dağılması / Nigel Ramsay

8 Avusturya'da Laikleşme ve Manastır Kütüphaneleri / Friedrich Buchmayr

9 Kaybolan Kraliyet Kütüphaneleri ve Hanover Sarayı Kültürü / Clarissa Campbell Orr

10 İhtilale bağlı el koymalar ve bunların Fransız Kütüphanecilik Tarihi açısından sonuçları / Dominique Varry

11 Kitap Belası: İrlanda Kilisesi Piskoposluk Kütüphanelerinin Dağılması ve Yok Olması / Margaret Connolly

12 Vilna'nın Kayıp Yahudi Kütüphaneleri ve Frankfurt Institut zur Erforschung der Judenfrage / Sem C. Sutter

13 Çin'in Roosevelt Kütüphanesi / Rui Wang ve Yulin Yang

14 Çin'in Tibet Kütüphanelerini Yok etmesi / Rebecca J. Knuth

15 Kitapları Yakın / Robert J.Fyne
Profile Image for moi, k.y.a..
2,076 reviews380 followers
November 30, 2023
Twitter’da bi’ liste sağ olsun, keşfedip listeyi okuyalımmm diye kalkışmıştık. tabii ben geçen ay “kütüphaneler”i karıştırınca bu ay telafisini yapayım dedim
Profile Image for nikola.
42 reviews
March 3, 2013
I found that through the entire book, there is one common theme: the libraries mentioned were all destroyed or dispersed because of political gain one way or another. It brings up the point of where do we stop when on the subject of lost antiquity? Is the culture of the world, the legacy that the people who existed before us left, too insignificant to care about when trying to achieve something? I feel like this is why there needs to be more anthropologists in the world. Anthropologists look at things differently than other people. They reflect and look at things from all sides, rather than just one: theirs.

Reading this book really infuriated me because of the careless disregard for heritage, and at some points I needed to set it down and just stare at a wall while I contemplated what I just read -- though not in the same way I do a book whose language is just heavenly. At some points I was almost reduced to tears because all that knowledge was just gone. It made me want to throw the book against a wall, though it wasn't the book's fault that the horrible things that happened to those libraries happened.

This has become more of a rant than I had wanted it to, so I will just stop it here because I could go on to probably exceed the character limit for reviews. I do recommend this, though, even though it is incredibly maddening. It was very well researched and the writing isn't written in a way that it gets dry quickly. It's intriguing and informative, so I think everyone who loves books should read it.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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