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Återge eller återskapa? : faksimilen som verktyg och konstverk

Lundblad, Kristina LU (2014) p.79-102
Abstract
After a brief introduction to some core questions in the history of the book, such as the relationship between form and content, this article investigates the concept of facsimile and its use, and discusses a range of documents that go by the name of “facsimile”. The prevailing definitions of the term “facsimile” focus on the technical means of reproduction and the “exactness” of the copy. However, these definitions do not manage to distinguish the concept of facsimile, from that of a “copy” or “reproduction”. In spite of this and notwithstanding the rich diversity of products within the genre of facsimile, there seems to be a considerable consensus as to what can, and what can not, be called a facsimile. The common denominator – be it a... (More)
After a brief introduction to some core questions in the history of the book, such as the relationship between form and content, this article investigates the concept of facsimile and its use, and discusses a range of documents that go by the name of “facsimile”. The prevailing definitions of the term “facsimile” focus on the technical means of reproduction and the “exactness” of the copy. However, these definitions do not manage to distinguish the concept of facsimile, from that of a “copy” or “reproduction”. In spite of this and notwithstanding the rich diversity of products within the genre of facsimile, there seems to be a considerable consensus as to what can, and what can not, be called a facsimile. The common denominator – be it a digitized letter, a printed page reproduced in low resolution and presented in PDF-format, or a costly recreation of an entire manuscript complete with gold decoration and worm-holes – is the idea that the form of the original document produces meaning.



But what is the nature of the meaning produced? Special attention is given to the so called, "art facsimiles", and the use of facsimiles within edition philology. As to the former, the facsimile is often presented as a re-creation of the original document. Its precious materials and meticulous workmanship appeal to the sensual experience of the facsimile as a physical object. As for the latter, facsimiles are used as tools for analysis, and are perceived as reproductions of texts as images bringing into focus, understanding as opposed to sensing. With Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht’s theoretical concept of “presence” and “presence production”, the comparison sheds light on the diverse effects and functions of facsimiles. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
facsimile, faksimil, bokhistoria, grafisk form, graphic design, presence, reproduction, reproduktion, imitation
host publication
Mellan evighet och vardag – Lunds domkyrkas martyrologium, Liber daticus vetustior (den äldre gåvoboken) – studier och faksimilutgåva
editor
Nilsson Nylander, Eva
pages
79 - 102
publisher
Universitetsbiblioteket, Lunds universitet
ISSN
0348-4572
ISBN
978-91-7874-181-6
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
ff975ad6-4420-4f3f-880b-06d002a6e7bb (old id 4276669)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:22:02
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:15:23
@inbook{ff975ad6-4420-4f3f-880b-06d002a6e7bb,
  abstract     = {{After a brief introduction to some core questions in the history of the book, such as the relationship between form and content, this article investigates the concept of facsimile and its use, and discusses a range of documents that go by the name of “facsimile”. The prevailing definitions of the term “facsimile” focus on the technical means of reproduction and the “exactness” of the copy. However, these definitions do not manage to distinguish the concept of facsimile, from that of a “copy” or “reproduction”. In spite of this and notwithstanding the rich diversity of products within the genre of facsimile, there seems to be a considerable consensus as to what can, and what can not, be called a facsimile. The common denominator – be it a digitized letter, a printed page reproduced in low resolution and presented in PDF-format, or a costly recreation of an entire manuscript complete with gold decoration and worm-holes – is the idea that the form of the original document produces meaning. <br/><br>
<br/><br>
But what is the nature of the meaning produced? Special attention is given to the so called, "art facsimiles", and the use of facsimiles within edition philology. As to the former, the facsimile is often presented as a re-creation of the original document. Its precious materials and meticulous workmanship appeal to the sensual experience of the facsimile as a physical object. As for the latter, facsimiles are used as tools for analysis, and are perceived as reproductions of texts as images bringing into focus, understanding as opposed to sensing. With Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht’s theoretical concept of “presence” and “presence production”, the comparison sheds light on the diverse effects and functions of facsimiles.}},
  author       = {{Lundblad, Kristina}},
  booktitle    = {{Mellan evighet och vardag – Lunds domkyrkas martyrologium, Liber daticus vetustior (den äldre gåvoboken) – studier och faksimilutgåva}},
  editor       = {{Nilsson Nylander, Eva}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7874-181-6}},
  issn         = {{0348-4572}},
  keywords     = {{facsimile; faksimil; bokhistoria; grafisk form; graphic design; presence; reproduction; reproduktion; imitation}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  pages        = {{79--102}},
  publisher    = {{Universitetsbiblioteket, Lunds universitet}},
  title        = {{Återge eller återskapa? : faksimilen som verktyg och konstverk}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/3330113/8768626.pdf}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}