'morgen!
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
"Was immer Frauen tun – sie müssen es zweimal besser tun als Männer, damit man sie für halb so gut hält. Glücklicherweise ist das nicht allzu schwer." (Charlotte Whitton, 1896-1975, kanadische Politikerin) [via https://t.co/L4VYhltLO1]
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
It's always a pleasure to visit the Royal Library #densortediamant in Copenhagen for research. pic.twitter.com/vQbcFMfGYs
— Music and Politics Muenster (@MP_Muenster) July 30, 2021
definiere österreichische lösung pic.twitter.com/kEoC0x3FsK
— Tereza (Dr.) Hossa (@terezahossa) July 30, 2021
Academic conferences: "We are thrilled to announce that we will hold the next annual meeting in person!"
Delta variant: "I have more of a comment than a question…"
— Suzanna Krivulskaya (@suzzzanna) July 29, 2021
Viele #Fachhochschulen in NRW feiern kommenden Sonntag ihr 50-jähriges Jubiläum. Auch in #Duisburg und #Essen wurden 1971 FHs gegründet. Was aus ihnen geworden ist, erläutert das #Uniarchiv auf unserem BibBlog: https://t.co/MNgK6rbLhP pic.twitter.com/z7Mc8l8zff
— UB Duisburg-Essen (@ubdue) July 30, 2021
Kennen Sie schon … das Portal „Im Werden“? https://t.co/KKSmRUpvRv
— ULB_MS_FachInfo (@ULB_MS_FachInfo) July 30, 2021
#MovingTexts2021 #SHARP2021 pic.twitter.com/aSKCa0JBbJ
— SHARP 2021 Moving Texts (@MovingTexts2021) July 30, 2021
I've lost control of the situation.
— God (@TheTweetOfGod) July 30, 2021
In the window of an indie bookstore https://t.co/aNjNKkrsK2 pic.twitter.com/v3cxxN9ks5
— Cory Doctorow NONCONSENSUAL BLUE TICK (@doctorow) July 30, 2021
Kleines Rätsel? Anonym wird man diesen Titel kaum nennen können, zeigt sich der Autor in der gestochenen Vignette doch mit seinem Schloss. Rätselhaft sind da eher schon die Druckorte und Auftraggeber, denn nicht der Autor, sondern wer veranlasste den Druck? Wer weiß es? pic.twitter.com/WAPpeJcGmN
— MychalSimka (@wilsberg) July 30, 2021
Die Wirklichkeit ist immer fragmentarisch. Manchmal begegnet man jemanden & dann verliert man ihn aus den Augen. Man vergisst Dinge. Man belügt sich selbst, [lauter] Bruchstücke.
Patrick #Modiano *30.7.1945
Von allen Satzzeichen bevorzugte er das Fragezeichen.
[#homeoffice ] pic.twitter.com/838jyr29Dt
— Letnapark (@Letnapark) July 30, 2021
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421014628776218635
Launched! We are excited to announce that you can finally access our one stop shop website of resources about #PredatoryJournals https://t.co/o5TDnzbA1E
— OHRI Journalology (@_Journalology) July 29, 2021
It's #PaperbackBooksDay and we're celebrating our wonderful Penguin books collection, a gift of 6,000 items by Richard Lane, one of the co-founders of @PenguinBooks. Launched in 1935 Penguin brought serious softcovers to the masses at an affordable price. #PenguinBooks #Reading pic.twitter.com/rnGf3rXQ01
— Archives and Special Collections (@uomcollections) July 29, 2021
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421016210439819264
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421016284746092545
Für uns sehr relevant, da uns #KlausGSaur tatsächlich auch mit Vorträgen im @IBI_HU begeisterte, aber sogar mehr noch, weil die dortige #SaurBibliothek der Gründungsort von #LIBREAS war.
Ehrentag eines Büchermenschen: Verleger, nie verlegen https://t.co/Qfdfv5t8CC via @faznet
— @libreas@openbiblio.social (@LIBREAS) July 27, 2021
(Und an ausgelassenen Tagen war die #SaurBibliothek durchaus auch mal Parkour für Übungen in einer mittlerweile olympischen Disziplin – hier @bkaden mit dem damaligen "Editorial Skateboard" / #Bibliothekssport) pic.twitter.com/YnCPyj5tpP
— @libreas@openbiblio.social (@LIBREAS) July 27, 2021
A famous book historian on Wonder is asking all of you: what everyday activities have you integrated into your #SHARP2021 experience? Laundry, cooking, yoga, dog-walking? Do spill the beans! #MovingTexts2021
— SHARP 2021 Moving Texts (@MovingTexts2021) July 29, 2021
HUGE congratulations to our 2021 DeLong Book History Book Award winner, Professor Kathy Peiss for Information Hunters: When Librarians, Soldiers and Spies Banded Together in World War II Europe (published by @OxUniPress) #MovingTexts2021 #SHARP2021
— SHARP (@sharporg@hcommons.social) (@SHARPorg) July 29, 2021
@UOLCampus Development has been hard at work installing two #LittleFreeLibrary’s on campus! This one, painted by @asenseofhewma, is in our Sustainable Garden as part of the wellbeing space that is still in development 📚 pic.twitter.com/PdnYevJwoN
— University of Leeds Sustainability (@UoL_Sus) July 29, 2021
Es ist jetzt 10 Uhr.
— zurvollenstunde (@zurvollenstunde) July 30, 2021
Happy Friday everyone! Sophie signing in. Are we all ready to tackle the last working day? pic.twitter.com/jqAFPLHzbH
— University of Warwick Library (@warwicklibrary) July 30, 2021
Emily Brontë was born #OTD in Thornton, West Yorkshire in 1818.
Take a peek at one of her diary pages, which features a rare illustration labelled ‘Anne’ and ‘Emily’: https://t.co/rC4jqIAOec
© Brontë Parsonage Museum
📑 BS105 SB: 1558 pic.twitter.com/WdCXOwFU5z— British Library (@britishlibrary) July 30, 2021
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421019170716717061
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421019185103126529
China Southern maintaining the standards I care about pic.twitter.com/wfA80l8raD
— Antiokhos among the Angles (@AntiokhosE) July 29, 2021
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421027717349265408
First Dog on the Moon is going to solve all of your problems* | First Dog on the Moon https://t.co/70sC9GU8Jf
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
A footnote about celebrity & influencer books in the German market #MovingTexts2021 #SHARP2021 https://t.co/qa9lvDUHCg
— SHARP 2021 Moving Texts (@MovingTexts2021) July 30, 2021
I will now virtually head over to @bodleianlibs during the next #MovingTexts2021 session: "Digitising, Identifying and Delivering Special Collections material at the Bodleian Libraries" https://t.co/hE7Hy3Cne1 🙂 #library #specialcollections #digitization
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
the session, chaired by @iangadd, starts with a talk on "Identifying Special Collection objects in federated collections" by Alexander Hitchman, metadata analyist @bodleianlibs. the "starting problem": there a many libraries + many [not conncected] manuscript catalogues in oxford pic.twitter.com/PXwmPMBIA1
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
the catalogues can't all be merged into one, but alex and his colleagues are working on linking them to make a "meta search" possible while keeping all their individual strengths. but: there are, hm, difficulties. 🙂 #MovingTexts2021 pic.twitter.com/pUyhGcCeSM
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
alex opts for "hooks" = #persistentidentifiers. *affirmative nodding here* 🙂 but, of course: there are also difficulties with that … #MovingTexts2021 [unfortunately I missed the "requirements for PIDs" slide. :(] pic.twitter.com/J4ShNoxHio
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
a solution could be ARK, the "Archival Resource Key", to build shared vocabularies. https://t.co/MbyYwnOwPI & https://t.co/11MvKxw9lE & @arks_org. 💪🙃 #library #digitization #persistentidentifier #MovingTexts2021 pic.twitter.com/a20ihqA8db
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
next Ruth Turvey speaks about "Using digitization projects to open up library collections" also from the perspective of @bodleianlibs. #library #digitization #specialcollections #openaccess #openscience #MovingTexts2021 pic.twitter.com/q9Icuu73K2
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
also for #library #digitization projects #standards are important – as is #engagement with the different audiences! enter @bdlss, for example. 🙂 #MovingTexts2021 pic.twitter.com/kLUEN2Cp8I
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
there are various tools to measure the "impact" of #library #digitization projects, but the results have to by analyzed with care. #MovingTexts2021 – thank you for these interesting talks, Alex and Ruth! pic.twitter.com/xb6VCx7Sp0
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
N.B.: the ARKs haven't been put into practice just yet. Alex Hitchman: "It's going to be complicated, because it needs to last forever." #MovingTexts2021
— Henning Hansen (@henninghansen.bsky.social) (@bookhistories) July 30, 2021
Ruth Turvey on one of the several benefits of library source digitization, especially during current times: “Digitization facilitates teaching and research. […] Digitized sources can increase the pace and efficiency of scholarship.” #SHARP2021 #MovingTexts2021
— Michael Erwig (@Micwig) July 30, 2021
Shelfmarks are not persistent identifiers #MovingTexts2021
— Henning Hansen (@henninghansen.bsky.social) (@bookhistories) July 30, 2021
for a bit of local advertising 🙂 and some after-conference browsing material here is an overview of the #digital plattforms of Münster University #Library:https://t.co/owGbZZPFbJ newly digitized documents are also announced via https://t.co/rmi7TKG7wX. 🙂 #MovingTexts2021
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
Toby works through the time zone difference one last morning for the last day of #SHARP2021 #MovingTexts #SHARPcats #catsatSHARP pic.twitter.com/QBJXBue58N
— Jennifer B Pierce (@TheTobstersMom) July 30, 2021
And @anna_lujz throws in a great Q: what happens if you discovered a book contains a medieval manuscript? If the book already has a persistent ARK, what happens?#MovingTexts2021 https://t.co/M12IPCnjHV
— Marie Léger-St-Jean (@Marie_LSJ) July 30, 2021
According to @iangadd, the Zoom rooms turn into pumpkins at the end of the session. Did I get that right? 🎃 #MovingTexts2021 #SHARP2021
— SHARP 2021 Moving Texts (@MovingTexts2021) July 30, 2021
a video tip Ruth had for us in the post-session discussion in the wonder-me room: "Bodley and the Bookworms – Scan and Deliver" featuring @richove and many other staff of by @bodleianlibs: https://t.co/RlQ02E430X 😀 #library #services #digitization 📚🖥️💪🎸🏍️🙃 #MovingTexts2021
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
I thought @bodleianlibs was a stuffy place, but I stand corrected…
As @iangadd said, let's make this music video go viral!#MovingTexts2021 https://t.co/2V4bCKMfgp
— Marie Léger-St-Jean (@Marie_LSJ) July 30, 2021
for comparison here's the "role model" song: https://t.co/gm2963cs0L 🙂
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
Excellent reply from @bodleianlibs, demonstrating they can be stuffy, retro punk, AND snarky!#MovingTexts2021 https://t.co/Hrmh1403oV
— Marie Léger-St-Jean (@Marie_LSJ) July 30, 2021
How dare you pigeonhole us. We can be both stuffy AND retro punk popstars, you know 😀
— Bodleian Libraries (@bodleianlibs) July 30, 2021
Really looking forward to the closing plenary, with Cetonia Weston-Roy and Lee Francis IV, at #MovingTexts2021, & hearing more about the Niche Book Bar, The Black Author's Collective & Native Realities 👇 pic.twitter.com/p0TlXcDIAk
— Chris Louttit (@drchrislouttit) July 30, 2021
Two resources to follow latest developments in #bookhistory shared at the #MovingTexts2021 AGM after my comment lamenting declining multilingualism at @SHARPorg confs:
1⃣Interdisciplinary Perspectives from German-Area Scholars (D-A-CH) by @bookhistorynetwhttps://t.co/5nKeeUgoCw https://t.co/9Eu6O4ha5e
— Marie Léger-St-Jean (@Marie_LSJ) July 30, 2021
2⃣Nederlandse Boekhistorische Vereniging (Dutch Bookhistorical Society)@NbvBoekhist https://t.co/ZHbBqk3Vbg#MovingTexts2021
— Marie Léger-St-Jean (@Marie_LSJ) July 30, 2021
[oh, I forgot to mention @IlonaRiek for pointing me to the original song. :)]
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
the nomadological dimension of the"book bike" or the idea of "postapocalyptic book mobile" or indie bookstores that can de-territorialize and re-territorialize book culture #MovingTexts2021
— marija dalbello – ї (@DalbelloMarija) July 30, 2021
*Seeking suggestions!*
Talking to @cassidy_holahan and then taking a shower (always a generative moment) led me to realize I was sitting on some unpublished or undervalorized work I should share…
1st tweet in French, then reverting back to English#MovingTexts2021
— Marie Léger-St-Jean (@Marie_LSJ) July 30, 2021
While this wonderful conference week is coming to an end, our box of texts – inspired by such interesting discussions – is about to set off to another adventure. Its next destination: Amsterdam! Let's make the traveling texts a SHARP tradition. What do you say @sharpamsterdam? 📚 pic.twitter.com/cDZFK2n1TF
— SHARP 2021 Moving Texts (@MovingTexts2021) July 30, 2021
In January, a final decision will be made on whether @sharpamsterdam is an online-only conference or a hybrid one.
In any case, mark your calendars for July 11th-15th 2022!#MovingTexts2021https://t.co/f174FV4XBr
— Marie Léger-St-Jean (@Marie_LSJ) July 29, 2021
#MovingTexts2021, what are your favourite independent bookshops? Reply here. 👇
— SHARP News (@SHARPorgNews) July 30, 2021
"Getting lost in your own shelves again." Lovely quote by Dr. Lee Francis 4 @redplanetbnc at the final (😢) plenary of #MovingTexts2021 This can refer to our research, our pleasure reads, and all the other materials that our bookshelves hold for us.
— melusina (@melusinagr) July 30, 2021
it's already time for the closing ceremony of #MovingTexts2021. @corinnanorue and the great team behind @MovingTexts2021 – thank you very much for this interesting conference! it's the first time I heard about @SHARPorg, tbh, but I will definitely follow it in the upcoming years! pic.twitter.com/wOYOHTO7nW
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
as @CorinnaNoRue suggested going to @sharpamsterdam next year by bike I am thinking whether we could perhaps borrow our library's ebike for that – in case we need to transport some books or the like. https://t.co/77Ss4PwDsp 🤔🙃 #MovingTexts2021
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
@MovingTexts2021 was thoroughly and completely fulfilling intellectually and socially. Great job to @CorinnaNoRue and @chandinski @ellen6arth @evi_heinz and I don’t have anyone else on Twitter but I will find them! #MovingTexts2021 💜🍾🎊 (get some rest now, you all!)
— melusina (@melusinagr) July 30, 2021
#MovingTexts2021 people, it's been a slice! Looking forward to seeing you all again next year at @sharpamsterdam. Let's keep these conversations about digital #bookhistory/#bookstudies going until then, though, yeah?
— Dr Leah Henrickson (@leahhenrickson) July 30, 2021
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421143596254875653
Some personal news: the competition was really tough, but I'm delighted to announce that I've been voted as the 'best in-person conference attendee' for the @MovingTexts2021 conference #SHARP2021 #MovingTexts2021 😂💜 pic.twitter.com/VxG3ykWAjS
— Dr Melanie Ramdarshan Bold (@ILoveCopyright) July 30, 2021
Wer mich maximal aufgeregt erleben möchte, 19:18 hier: https://t.co/nvplrMmulT https://t.co/5RbCCTxPFI
— Swagunke (@swagunke) July 30, 2021
Mit https://t.co/O8G82bLxFE haben wir einen Wegweiser zur digitalen Verwaltungsleistung veröffentlicht. In der Begleitstudie beschreiben wir die Erstellung des Handbuchs und geben Empfehlungen für die Weiterentwicklung und Verbreitung.
Zur Studie 👉 https://t.co/wcJW9n5cBH pic.twitter.com/4QwfLUjSHt
— Nationaler Normenkontrollrat (@NKR_Bund) July 20, 2021
In unserem heutigen #followfriday wollen wir ihnen folgende Accounts empfehlen:
– @OpenDataBundDe (Unser Azubiaccount, beschäftigt sich im 1. Lehrjahr vorallem mit Lizenzen)
– @NKR_Bund (Normen sind wichtig!)#FF ^ac— Bundesstelle für Open Data (@bund_dev) July 30, 2021
I don't. https://t.co/4Q7fmGEkLv
— God (@TheTweetOfGod) July 30, 2021
Me in 2019: Ugh I hate going places by train I just wanna stay home and just not go places
The year 2020: 🙂
Me in 2021: You know what? I freaking love being on the train. It’s amazing. You just sit there and it takes you places*!!!
* By “places” I mean this 🤩 pic.twitter.com/SC369sXvQR
— Lena Ackermann (lenaackermann.bsky.social) (@_lenaackermann) July 30, 2021
„Und welche Experimente macht ihr da in eurem Soziologie-Studium?“ pic.twitter.com/WJw7hNwlJx
— Hauck & Bauer (@hauckundbauer) July 30, 2021
Did you know #eReader technology got its start in the 1990s? Learn about its full history in this #blog: https://t.co/i9fEGh65km
— E Ink (@EInk) July 30, 2021
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021
Meet Indiana Bones, the museum cat that parades around after hours ruling over all the bones at the Museum of Osteology pic.twitter.com/MmctyguDFi
— Rob (@thegallowboob) July 30, 2021
"83,000 books, nearly 4 million images." Head of the MPIWG Library Esther Chen introduces Digital Libraries Connected (DLC)—an #openaccess platform of digitized documents from four Max Planck Society libraries—in this issue of MaxMag @maxplanckpress.
🔗https://t.co/j6wB1yUdIX pic.twitter.com/klMoazdE2v— Max Planck Institute for the History of Science (@MPIWG) July 30, 2021
What mysterious ca. 350 mm object left this (rust?) stain on @ucdavis MS D-041:20? Magnifying glass? Sickle? Bagpipes? @rarebookschool #fragmentology students want to know! pic.twitter.com/2jCJfzTzdf
— Lisa Fagin Davis (@lisafdavis) July 30, 2021
Wenn wir uns vorher auf die Schreibweise geeignet hätten, wäre 3G in unserer Wortwolke zum #FeedbackFriday viel größer. Aber mit Standardisierungen haben es Bibliothekar:innen ja nicht so… 🤪Allen ein schönes Wochenende! pic.twitter.com/XkpeWH4VW3
— SuUB Bremen 🏳️🌈 (@elibbremen) July 30, 2021
Für dieses Taschenbuch ist selbst die kleinste Tasche zu klein😉 . Ein Almanach aus dem Jahr 1821, Format 1,5 x 1 cm. #TagdesTaschenbuchs #TagdesTaschenbuches #booklovers #booklove @bibverband pic.twitter.com/IBUdzkk3t6
— Badische Landesbibliothek (@BLB_Karlsruhe) July 30, 2021
"Where are your new books?"
"Right here."
"No, because I saw this book here two days ago. Where are the new books that are actually new?"
"They don’t get stale. They aren't donuts."— Lousy Librarian (@LousyLibrarian) July 30, 2021
We’re not so PG anymore 😂 pic.twitter.com/fOcSc7Nw3g
— PG tips (@PGtips) July 30, 2021
Love is in the (h)air! https://t.co/HggrHnL7CV Jörg Sonntag über das kulturelle Potenzial des menschlichen Haares im Frühmittelalter
— @bgebert@openbiblio.social (@BjoernGebert) July 30, 2021
Schönen Tipp gestern gelesen, dass man in OBS Studio auch SVGs (auch animierte natürlich) direkt einbinden kann: Add > Browser > Local file = SVG file.
— Tobias Zeumer – @vform@verweisungsform.de (@vform) July 30, 2021
Moon wobble (for @newscientist) pic.twitter.com/lhU4Dt6BRO
— TwistedDoodles (@twisteddoodles) July 30, 2021
Ways to respond to being the most deeply insulted you’ve ever been in your life:
“Bit harsh”
“No need for that”
“Unnecessary”
“Mate…”
“That’s your opinion”
“Oh cheers”
“Thanks a bunch”
“Fair enough”
“I’ll put the kettle on”
“Right-o”
“Yeah, well, you’re not perfect either”— VeryBritishProblems (@SoVeryBritish) July 30, 2021
REMINDER 📢
The Burton Library and Reading Room will be closed this weekend (31st July & 1st August) due to a summertime clean. The spaces will be available again on Monday. If you need any reference books from the Burton, please ask the help desk. pic.twitter.com/5qWefJ1QhV— Uni Of York Library (@UoYLibrary) July 30, 2021
Excel https://t.co/3AJMgCVd1P
— A Question A Day (@data_question) July 30, 2021
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1421181748218634242
'nacht allerseits, und schönes wochenende, trotz allem!
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 30, 2021