Burning the books A history of the deliberate destruction of knowledge

Richard Ovenden

Book - 2020

Opening with the notorious bonfires of "un-German" and Jewish literature in 1933 that offered such a clear signal of Nazi intentions, Burning the Books takes us on a 3000-year journey through the destruction of knowledge and the fight against all the odds to preserve it. Richard Ovenden, director of the world-famous Bodleian Library, explains how attacks on libraries and archives have been a feature of history since ancient times but have increased in frequency and intensity during the modern era. Libraries are far more than stores of literature, through preserving the legal documents such as Magna Carta and records of citizenship, they also support the rule of law and the rights of citizens. Today, the knowledge they hold on beha...lf of society is under attack as never before. In this fascinating book, he explores everything from what really happened to the Great Library of Alexandria to the Windrush papers, from Donald Trump's deleting embarrassing tweets to John Murray's burning of Byron's memoirs in the name of censorship. At once a powerful history of civilisation and a manifesto for the vital importance of physical libraries in our increasingly digital age, Burning the Books is also a very human story animated by an unlikely cast of adventurers, self-taught archaeologists, poets, freedom-fighters; and, of course, librarians and the heroic lengths they will go to preserve and rescue knowledge, ensuring that civilization survives. From the rediscovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the desert, hidden from the Romans and lost for almost 2000 years to the medieval manuscript that inspired William Morris, the knowledge of the past still has so many valuable lessons to teach us and we ignore it at our peril.

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Subjects
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Ovenden (author)
Edition
First Harvard University Press edition
Physical Description
308 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 263-290) and index.
ISBN
9780674241206
  • Introduction
  • 1. Cracked Clay Under the Mounds
  • 2. A Pyre of Papyrus
  • 3. When Books Were Dog Cheap
  • 4. An Ark to Save Learning
  • 5. Spoil of the Conqueror
  • 6. How to Disobey Kafka
  • 7. The Twice-Burned Library
  • 8. The Paper Brigade
  • 9. To Be Burned Unread
  • 10. Sarajevo Mon Amour
  • 11. Flames of Empire
  • 12. An Obsession with Archives
  • 13. The Digital Deluge
  • 14. Paradise Lost?
  • 15. Coda: Why We Will Always Need Libraries and Archives
  • Acknowledgements
  • Picture Credits
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Ovenden, director of the Bodleian Libraries of Oxford University, debuts with a wide-ranging and thought-provoking account of efforts to destroy, neglect, or conceal books, archives, private papers, government documents, and other records. Ovenden describes the May 10, 1933, burning of thousands of "un-German" books by pro-Nazi students in Berlin and attacks by German troops in WWI and WWII on the Louvain University library in Belgium, as well as the targeting of the Library of Congress by the British in the War of 1812 and the destruction of the National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina by the Serbs in 1992. Discussions of the burning of Lord Byron's memoir and Philip Larkin's diaries by their literary executors and loved ones feel somewhat tangential, but Ovenden's account of the destruction and removal of government archives from Iraq during the Second Gulf War, thereby limiting access to crucial information on the modern history of the country, is eye-opening and alarming. Even more troublesome, according to Ovenden, are the vast quantities of information currently held at the whim of a few global tech giants. He stuffs the narrative with intriguing arcana, and counterbalances the grim rundown of dangers posed to cultural heritage with profiles of librarians and archivists working to opposite ends. The result is an engrossing and informative portrait of how important it is to preserve and protect knowledge. (Nov.)

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