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Tag Archives: digital social media

How We Look at Book Arts: An Interview with Tumblr Blogger Leah Leslie

Posted on March 22, 2015 by centre for the history of the book
1

Screenshot (35)I have never been ashamed to embrace the often turbulent digital culture of the 21st-century twenty-something. Nearly every day new technologies are introduced, aiming to ease the burden of living in a technology-saturated world; and more social media tools are created to help the lonely pseudo-adult connect to the outside world from the comfort of her desk, couch, and occasionally — as I’m brave enough to admit — bed. Out of the mess of fan blogs, gossip headlines, and pictures of cats, there sometimes emerge genuine communities, such as networks of enthusiasts passionate about their particular field, using popular web platforms to collect, document, and archive the objects of their own passion. As Zadie Smith wrote in her second novel The Autograph Man, ‘the collector is the savior of objects that might otherwise be lost’.

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Posted in Interviews | Tagged artist's books, book arts, book design, bookbinding, codices, digital social media | 1 Reply

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