"Who Created the New and Copied the Old": Printed Books of the Fifteenth century

Monday, October 7th, 2019 - Sunday, February 16th, 2020

Featuring The David Wertheimer, Class of 1977, Collection of Early Printed Books

 In the fifteenth century, printing was deeply interwoven with the tradition of the manuscript, even as the production of printed text surpassed that of the traditional manuscript. Commentary on the new technology of the printing press provides a moment that is instantly familiar; concerns about the change from the practices of the existing world in which scribes copied manuscripts to the new technologies of efficiency and mass production are not far removed from the anxieties expressed about contemporary technological developments and their impact on the moral and intellectual culture of the 21st century. “Who Created the New and Copied the Old”: Printed Books of the Fifteenth Century examines the many roles of printed books in the first fifty years following the advent of print, moving throughout medieval Europe through the lens of religion and scholarship to explore the relationship between printed text and its owner. 

Curator & Collector Talks: Sat, Oct. 26th 4pm - 6pm 

Rebecca & Rick White Gallery
Lutnick Library
Haverford College
370 Lancaster Avenue

Haverford, PA

40.0119253, -75.2996179

"Who Created the New and Copied the Old": Printed Books of the Fifteenth century