:A symposium co-sponsored by Winterthur Museum and Country Estate
and The Library Company of Philadelphia will consider numerous
genres of printed ephemera, tracing their origins in Europe,
their transit to American shores and further development in this
country.
"Ephemera Across the Atlantic: Popular Print Culture in Two
Worlds" takes place September 15-17. The slate of speakers
includes scholars from Germany, Great Britain, Sweden and Canada,
as well as the United States.
"The invention of printing in the Fifteenth Century
revolutionized the way people communicated and created a 'print
culture' producing everything from scholarly books with the
finest illustrations to the broadsides and chapbooks of popular
and folk culture," said Don Yoder, professor emeritus of folklife
studies and religious studies at the University of Pennsylvania.
"Much printed material consisted of transitory documents of
everyday life, produced in small print shops and circulated to
local communities," Yoder continued. "This printed 'ephemera,'
often discarded after use, included pictorial prints, advertising
flyers, membership certificates, songs and ballads, broadside
announcements and tickets. The ephemeral nature of these items,
however, belies their importance, as they often provide the only
surviving evidence illuminating for us the roles that religion,
medicine, politics, military activities and entertainment played
in lives in the past."
The first day of the symposium will take place at Winterthur,
Route 52. The following day's activities will be at the Library
Company of Philadelphia, 1314 Locust Street. Register by
September 1 to guarantee a space.
For information or to register, www.librarycompany.org or
215-546-3181, or www.winterthur.org or 302-888-4600.