Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home: Sources and Context

Frame from Alison Bechdel's Fun Home

A frame from Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home,         © Alison Bechdel

Each summer, Vassar College sends members of the incoming class a book, with the purpose of introducing new students to significant ideas or issues, and welcoming them to engage in academic discussion of the work. This year’s “common reading” is Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, a provocative and beautiful graphic novel that is likely to elicit a sense of connection with the work itself as well as with its writer. In anticipation of Bechdel’s William Starr Lecture on Tuesday (October 7th), we offer a video blog as well as a list of sources that was created earlier this year by Research Librarian Gretchen Lieb. The blog puts Bechdel’s work in context and suggests a number of possibilities for further reading.

Gretchen Lieb Video Blog

For further reading
(Links may not work for non-Vassar users):

Ann Cvetkovich’s “Drawing the Archive in Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home”  in Women’s Studies Quarterly, 36(1/2):111-128

Judith Thurman’s profile of Alison Bechdel in the New Yorker, 23 Apr 2012

Special issue of Critical Inquiry, Spring 2014

Helen Hokison cartoon

Helen E. Hokinson cartoon from the New Yorker, ca. 1930-1939

 

P.S. If you’re unsure about how to say Alison Bechdel’s name, the author has provided an assist.

The Other Nuremberg Chronicle

Posted on behalf of Ron Patkus, Director of Archives and Special Collections

On view in the Vassar College Library this semester is “Never Before Has Your Like Been Printed: The Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493.” This exhibition deals with the most heavily illustrated book of the 15th century. Compiled by the German humanist Hartmann Schedel, illustrated by Michael Wolgemut and Wilhelm Pleydenwurff, and printed by Anton Koberger, this folio-sized work presents a history of the world, beginning with the story of creation. Amazingly, the Nuremberg Chronicle features more than 1,800 woodcuts of people, cities, and events. Vassar is fortunate to count among its holdings both Latin and German editions of the book, which came out in the same year. In addition, it has a number of leaves from the two editions, as well as books that relate to the Nuremberg Chronicle in some way.

Wood cut of Augusta

Woodcut of Augsberg from the 1497 pirated edition of the Nuremberg Chronicle

Because of its important place in the history of printing, many people have at least some knowledge of this famous work. Less well known is the story of the “pirated” editions of this work. In 1496, a printer by the name of Johann Schönsperger (c. 1455-before 1521) produced copies of the German text in Augsburg, a city about 90 miles south of Nuremberg.   The next year he printed a Latin edition, and then in 1500 he again printed the German edition. Schönsperger’s editions followed the text of the Nuremberg originals closely, but they were smaller, with newly-made illustrations.   They were therefore cheaper and more portable than the Nuremberg originals, and so aimed at a different audience.

Vassar holds a copy of the 1497 Latin edition that was printed in Augsburg, and it is on display in the current exhibition. This copy bears interesting marks of its history. We see, for instance, several inscriptions and ink stamps of previous owners on the title page, and a bookplate on the front paste-down for the most recent owner, George McMaster Jones. In addition, there are early marginal annotations throughout, including some relating to Pope Joan, with an expanded account of her life tipped in before leaf 191. The book is bound in 17th century sheep, with a decorated spine. Apart from this book, Vassar also owns a leaf-book, which tells the story of the Nuremberg Chronicle and includes a leaf from a copy of the same Latin Augsburg edition.

The story of the Augsburg printings tells us much about early printing in Europe. It’s interesting to see how Koberger and Schönsperger each tried to package and market a particular work in ways they felt would be profitable. Koberger may not have anticipated that other printings would be made so soon, and Schönsperger’s efforts almost certainly cut into the sales of the Nuremberg originals (we know from a 1509 accounting that nearly 600 copies of Koberger’s books were left unsold). In addition, the production and circulation of the Augsburg printings also tells us something about how popular this text was at the end of the fifteenth century. If we add up the copies sold from printings in both cities, we see that the texts circulated widely across the continent. Knowing something about the “other” Nuremberg Chronicle gives us a much fuller picture of this remarkable work.

 

New Season: The Library Cafe

Document2Wednesday, September 17, 2014 at 12:00 noon The Library Cafe returns to the airwaves with an interview with the media historian Lisa Gitelman, who will discuss her book Paper Knowledge: Toward a Media History of Documents (Duke University Press, 2014). The Library Cafe is a weekly program of table talk with scholars, artists, librarians and publishers about research, ideas, and the formation and circulation of knowledge. It is hosted by librarian Thomas Hill and can be heard each week on Wednesdays from noon to one p.m. on WVKR (91.3FM). Episodes are uploaded for podcast after each episode on the program website at http://library-cafe.org, where you will also find a listing of future guests. This semester’s lineup includes Vassar Professors Barbara Olsen, Peipei Qiu, and Lydia Murdoch, as well as an array of distinguished visiting scholars who write on media, scholarship, and higher education.