The Afterlife of Books

The Afterlife of Books

Jonathan Swift imagined a battle of books in the night, volumes hurling themselves off the shelves to tear each other’s pages out. But what really happens when the lights are dimmed, when readers go home, when a library falls into disuse or is abandoned to human disaster?

The Library at Night

Robert Lepage, Canada’s theatrical genius, was inspired by Alberto Manguel’s The Library at Night to create a virtual-reality nocturnal visit to the world’s great libraries. The installation, developed to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Montreal’s Grande Bibliothèque, opened in Montreal in 2015, closed in Quebec City this month, and is moving to the Francois-Mitterand Library in Paris for the summer.

Imagine walking through a dark forest of looming birches, the ground underfoot adrift in leaves—the leaves of books. You sit at a small library table, under the wan light of a green-glass lamp, pull on a set of heavy glasses, look up into the starry sky, and suddenly you are in the library at Alexandria, where clerks are shelving papyrus rolls, flames licking at their feet. Or you’re in the Nautilus, in Jules Verne’s imaginary library, twenty thousand leagues under the sea.

To enter this virtual reality, you first walk through a recreation of the private library Manguel—one of the world’s great bibliophiles—housed in a 15th-century barn in the Loire.

“Like memory, a library works differently at night,” writes Manguel, who often sits in his library in the wee hours. “By day, each book seems to offer itself to the gaze equitably and democratically. But at night, certain books disappear while others assert themselves in the halo of your light.”

Lepage calls holdings such as the Copenhagen Library, where books can be seen but not borrowed, ‘dead libraries.’ When we no longer need physical books, he says, “We think, oh, libraries will just go away.”

But will they?

Last Folio

In 1942, a small Jewish village in Slovakia was abandoned as its citizens fled the Second World War or were hauled away to concentration camps. The local school remained locked until ten years ago when Yuri Dojc, a Canadian photographer, opened the door with his documentary film team and recorded the books decaying on dusty shelves, silent survivors of a brutal history.

The film and Dojc’s photographs, which are at the Art Gallery of Hamilton until mid May, are not just a memorial to the bindings of paper we call books.

In Dojc’s portraits, the stories can be felt and the human history, too: the hands that once opened these pages, the fingers that traced the words.

The Alchemy of Books

Anselm Kiefer, German painter and sculptor, sees books as collective memory. They are the spine of his life’s work: sand books, burnt books, books made of lead, recent books of erotic watercolours made on plaster, and an entire library, Shevirat Ha-Kelim or the Breaking of the Vessels—a 17-foot-tall bookshelf with 41 oversized lead books decorated and interspersed with broken glass that shatters to the floor.

Forty of his “artist’s books” will soon be on display at Gagosian’s 21st Street gallery and this week Kiefer makes a rare public appearance at the New York Public Library to talk about them.

“What interests me is the transformation, not the monument. I don’t construct ruins, but I feel ruins are moments when things show themselves. A ruin is not a catastrophe. It is the moment when things can start again.”

The Future Library

It is impossible to imagine what future technologies will keep our print and digital books alive and readable.

Katie Paterson, a Scottish installation artist, has begun a Future Library Project that demonstrates extraordinary—some might say foolhardy—faith in the survival of the book. Every year for the next hundred years, a writer will be invited to prepare a manuscript that will be sealed, as both printed text and on a thumb drive, in a special room in the new Deichman Library in Oslo. Margaret Atwood was the first in 2014, followed by David Mitchell and the Icelandic writer Sjón.

As part of the project, a forest of one thousand trees was planted; a century from now, the trees will be pulped to produce the paper to print an anthology of the one hundred sealed texts. Perhaps by then printed books will have gone the way of the scroll. Just in case, Katie Paterson has added a printing press to the vault.

“It’s very optimistic to do a project that believes there will be people in a hundred years, that those people will still be reading, that they will be interested in opening all of these boxes and seeing what’s inside them, and that we will be able to communicate across time, which is what any book is—a communication across space and time,” Atwood mused for a video camera as she leaned against a tree near the newly planted forest.

“Future Library is hopeful in its essence, because it believes there’s going to be a reader in the future,” says Katie. To which Atwood smiles her characteristic wry smile. “Nature doesn’t really care whether there are human beings or not.”

Or books, for that matter.

But if there are humans, my bet is that there will be something to read. Technologies come and go, but if history is anything to go by, the human craving for story is eternal.

Do you have a personal library? What will happen to it when you are gone? Do all the libraries of your life still exist?

1 Comment

  1. Wayne Grady Author April 30, 2017 (12:31 pm)

    i’m pretty sure the first library in my life — the Bookmobile that used to come to our rural school in southern Ontario — is long gone, but I hope the books are still somewhere. One of the aspects of a personal library that I like is that each book is like a memory of when and where I bought it. If I take down a certain book, I have a sudden memory of the bookstore where I purchased it — The Word Bookstore in Montreal, say, or the late lamented Brittnell’s Bookstore in Toronto. Each book acts like a memory trigger, which is why I think we love the smell of books so much: a book is an olfactory experience as well as a visual one.

    Reply to Wayne Grady

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