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Journal articles on the topic 'University of South Carolina. South Caroliniana Library'

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1

Swenson Danowitz, Erica. "Sheet Music Collection: University of South Carolina Music Library2012191Sheet Music Collection: University of South Carolina Music Library. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Music Library 2001‐. Gratis URL: http://sheetmusic.library.sc.edu/ Last visited December 2011." Reference Reviews 26, no. 4 (April 27, 2012): 52–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/09504121211234023.

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Connor, Elizabeth. "Interview with Ruth Riley of the School of Medicine Library at the University of South Carolina." Journal of Electronic Resources in Medical Libraries 8, no. 2 (April 2011): 150–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15424065.2011.576610.

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Hewitt, Joe A., and Stephanie A. Horowitz. "Documenting the American South and the Public Library User: A Proposal to Improve Access for the General Public to a Database of Southern and North Carolina Materials." North Carolina Libraries 65, no. 2 (March 24, 2008): 70–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.3776/ncl.v65i2.44.

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Databases of historical primary sources such as the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Documenting the American South are highly used and appreciated by members of the general public as well as scholars. North Carolina public library users could benefit greatly if links to such resources were made available to them through public library Web sites. The most convenient solution would be for a central cultural resource institution to take charge of such a project.
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Dominguez, Patricia Buck, and Joe A. Hewitt. "A Public Good: Documenting the American South and Slave Narratives." RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage 8, no. 2 (September 1, 2007): 106–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/rbm.8.2.285.

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Documenting the American South (DAS) is an electronic publishing program of the University of North Carolina Library that provides public access to primary source materials related to Southern history, literature, and culture from the colonial period through the first decades of the twentieth century.1 It includes mainly nineteenth- and early twentieth-century published texts, with large numbers of autobiographies, biographies, essays, travel accounts, poetry, diaries, letters, and memoirs. It also offers a few titles published in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and some manuscripts, images, and audio files. DAS currently includes ten thematic collections.2 The American South has a unique cultural . . .
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Latham Skaggs, Bethany. "Documenting the American South (DocSouth)2005329Documenting the American South (DocSouth). URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, University Library Last visited January 2005. Gratis." Reference Reviews 19, no. 6 (September 2005): 53–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/09504120510613472.

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Sykes, Gayle D. "The MLIS Program via Distance Education at the College of Library and Information Sciences, University of South Carolina." Journal of Education for Library and Information Science 36, no. 1 (1995): 60. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40322982.

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Stanton, Cathy. "Review: This Land Is Your Land: Parks and Public Spaces. Clemson University Libraries and South Carolina Digital Library, Creators." Public Historian 38, no. 4 (November 1, 2016): 324–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/tph.2016.38.4.324.

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Abdoh, Esra Seddiq. "Library anxiety among Omani and Saudi Arabian international students: A case study at the University of South Carolina, USA." Journal of Academic Librarianship 47, no. 2 (March 2021): 102305. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2020.102305.

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Lochstet, Gwenn, and Donna H. Lehman. "A Correlation Method for Collecting Reference Statistics." College & Research Libraries 60, no. 1 (January 1, 1999): 45–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crl.60.1.45.

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While studying a sampling technique for collecting reference statistics, a correlation method for calculating reference statistics using weekly door counts also was tested at the University of South Carolina. Reference statistics and door counts taken on the sample weeks of the test year were correlated, and the resulting correlation coefficient between the two variables was used to calculate weekly reference statistics for the nonsampled weeks. The sum of these calculated weekly values and the actual values of the sampled weeks yielded a yearly total of reference transactions that is comparable to the yearly total determined by using the sampling technique. Thus, the correlation method may offer libraries an accurate and less time-consuming procedure for keeping reference statistics.
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Tenore, Kenneth R. "Organism‐Sediment Interactions. Based on a symposium held in Columbia, South Carolina, October 1998. The Belle W. Baruch Library in Marine Science, Number 21. Edited by Josephine Y Aller, Sarah A Woodin, and , Robert C Aller. Published for the Belle W. Baruch Institute for Marine Biology and Coastal Research by the University of South Carolina Press, Columbia (South Carolina). $60.00. xxiii + 403 p; ill.; index. ISBN: 1–57003–431–1. 2001." Quarterly Review of Biology 77, no. 3 (September 2002): 346–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/345235.

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Brown, Iain Gordon. "Sudduth, Elizabeth A. with the assistance of Clayton Tarr. The G. Ross Roy Collection of Robert Burns: An Illustrated Catalogue. Introduction by G. Ross Roy. Foreword by Thomas F. McNally. Columbia, SC: The University of South Carolina Press in co-operation with the Thomas Cooper Library, University of South Carolina, 2009. xx, 456 pp. Illus. Cloth, $59.95 (isbn 978-1-57003-829-7)." Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 104, no. 1 (March 2010): 126–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/680923.

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12

Chung, Arlene, Angela M. Stover, Lynne I. Wagner, Thomas William LeBlanc, Umit Topalaglu, Yousuf Zafar, Leah L. Zullig, Phil Smeltzer, and Ethan M. Basch. "Harmonization of patient-reported outcomes into EHRs at four cancer hospital outpatient clinics for patient care and quality assessment." Journal of Clinical Oncology 35, no. 8_suppl (March 10, 2017): 129. http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/jco.2017.35.8_suppl.129.

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129 Background: Patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures are well established in oncology trials but are not collected systematically during clinical care, to guide symptom management, or to assess quality. A growing body of evidence shows that collecting PROs during cancer care yields better clinical outcomes. Yet, little is known about best practices for PRO integration into electronic health record (EHR) workflows. We report on the first cross-institutional effort for PRO data harmonization across four CTSA-funded institutions (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Wake Forest University, Duke University, Medical University of South Carolina). Methods: Through surveys, systematic stakeholder qualitative focus groups, a landscape analysis, and technical/workflow assessment, our cross-institutional team sought to: 1) determine a set of common PRO measures to be collected via patient portals tethered to EHRs across the 4 sites; 2) develop an implementation strategy for the collection of PROs via patient portal within clinical workflows; and 3) collect a common set of PROs in cancer clinical care. We also sought to develop the methodological steps to harmonize extracted PRO data across each site to each other and then to the PCORnet Common Data Model Common Measures for PROs across each site. Results: Across the four sites, each institution uses Epic Systems (EHR and patient portal) and had available a library of PRO questionnaires which included the PROMIS profile (29 items) and short forms, SF-20, RAND, PHQ-2, and PHQ-9. The study team developed a list of domains and the tools available within each domain for stakeholders to prioritize at each site. The proposed workflows take into consideration the use of these data within the clinical encounter. Pilots at each site to collect PROs are underway along with the methodological work for data extraction and harmonization and will be reported at the meeting. Conclusions: The collection of a common set of PROs across EHRs has important implications for improving individual patient’s symptoms and for enhancing the quality of cancer care. Complex workflows and technical barriers must be considered successful implementation.
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Walter, Scott. "The Role of the Library in the First College Year. Ed. Larry Hardesty. Columbia, S.C.: National Resource Center for the First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, University of South Carolina (The First-Year Experience Monograph Series, no. 45), 2007. 296p. $40 (ISBN 1889271543). LC 2006-100837." College & Research Libraries 68, no. 6 (November 1, 2007): 563–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crl.68.6.563.

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KITLV, Redactie. "Book Reviews." New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 72, no. 1-2 (January 1, 1998): 125–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/13822373-90002604.

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-Valerie I.J. Flint, Margarita Zamora, Reading Columbus. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993. xvi + 247 pp.-Riva Berleant-Schiller, Historie Naturelle des Indes: The Drake manuscript in the Pierpont Morgan Library. New York: Norton, 1996. xxii + 272 pp.-Neil L. Whitehead, Charles Nicholl, The creature in the map: A journey to Eldorado. London: Jonathan Cape, 1995. 398 pp.-William F. Keegan, Ramón Dacal Moure ,Art and archaeology of pre-Columbian Cuba. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1996. xxiv + 134 pp., Manuel Rivero de la Calle (eds)-Michael Mullin, Stephan Palmié, Slave cultures and the cultures of slavery. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1995. xlvii + 283 pp.-Bill Maurer, Karen Fog Olwig, Small islands, large questions: Society, culture and resistance in the post-emancipation Caribbean. London: Frank Cass, 1995. viii + 200 pp.-David M. Stark, Laird W. Bergad ,The Cuban slave market, 1790-1880. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995. xxi + 245 pp., Fe Iglesias García, María Del Carmen Barcia (eds)-Susan Fernández, Tom Chaffin, Fatal glory: Narciso López and the first clandestine U.S. war against Cuba. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1996. xxii + 282 pp.-Damian J. Fernández, María Cristina García, Havana USA: Cuban exiles and Cuban Americans in South Florida, 1959-1994. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996. xiii + 290 pp.-Myrna García-Calderón, Carmen Luisa Justiniano, Con valor y a cómo dé lugar: Memorias de una jíbara puertorriqueña. Río Piedras: Editorial de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1994. 538 pp.-Jorge Pérez-Rolon, Ruth Glasser, My music is my flag: Puerto Rican musicians and their New York communities , 1917-1940. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1995. xxiv + 253 pp.-Lauren Derby, Emelio Betances, State and society in the Dominican Republic. Boulder CO: Westview Press, 1995. xix + 162 pp.-Michiel Baud, Bernardo Vega, Trujillo y Haiti, Volumen II (1937-1938). Santo Domingo: Fundación Cultural Dominicana, 1995. 427 pp.-Danielle Bégot, Elborg Forster ,Sugar and slavery, family and race: The letters and diary of Pierre Dessalles, Planter in Martinique, 1808-1856. Elborg & Robert Forster (eds. and trans.). Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1996. 322 pp., Robert Forster (eds)-Catherine Benoit, Richard D.E. Burton, La famille coloniale: La Martinique et la mère patrie, 1789-1992. Paris: L'Harmattan, 1994. 308 pp.-Roderick A. McDonald, Kathleen Mary Butler, The economics of emancipation: Jamaica & Barbados, 1823-1843. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995. xviii + 198 pp.-K.O. Laurence, David Chanderbali, A portrait of Paternalism: Governor Henry Light of British Guiana, 1838-48. Turkeyen, Guyana: Dr. David Chanderbali, Department of History, University of Guyana, 1994. xiii + 277 pp.-Mindie Lazarus-Black, Brian L. Moore, Cultural power, resistance and pluralism: Colonial Guyana 1838-1900. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press; Mona, Kingston: The Press-University of the West Indies, 1995. xv + 376 pp.-Madhavi Kale, K.O. Laurence, A question of labour: Indentured immigration into Trinidad and British Guiana, 1875-1917. Kingston: Ian Randle; London: James Currey, 1994. ix + 648 pp.-Franklin W. Knight, O. Nigel Bolland, On the March: Labour rebellions in the British Caribbean, 1934-39. Kingston: Ian Randle; London: James Currey, 1995. viii + 216 pp.-Linden Lewis, Kevin A. Yelvington, Producing power: Ethnicity, gender, and class in a Caribbean workplace. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1995. xv + 286 pp.-Consuelo López Springfield, Alta-Gracia Ortíz, Puerto Rican women and work: Bridges in transnational labor. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1996. xi + 249 pp.-Peta Henderson, Irma McClaurin, Women of Belize: Gender and change in Central America. New Brunswick NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1996. x + 218 pp.-Bonham C. Richardson, David M. Bush ,Living with the Puerto Rico Shore. José Gonzalez Liboy & William J. Neal. Durham: Duke University Press, 1995. xx + 193 pp., Richard M.T. Webb, Lisbeth Hyman (eds)-Bonham C. Richardson, David Barker ,Environment and development in the Caribbean: Geographical perspectives. Mona, Kingston: The Press-University of the West Indies, 1995. xv + 304 pp., Duncan F.M. McGregor (eds)-Alma H. Young, Anthony T. Bryan ,Distant cousins: The Caribbean-Latin American relationship. Miami: North-South-Center Press, 1996. iii + 132 pp., Andrés Serbin (eds)-Alma H. Young, Ian Boxill, Ideology and Caribbean integration. Mona, Kingston: The Press-University of the West Indies, 1993. xiii + 128 pp.-Stephen D. Glazier, Howard Gregory, Caribbean theology: Preparing for the challenges ahead. Mona, Kingston: Canoe Press, University of the West Indies, 1995. xx + 118 pp.-Lise Winer, Richard Allsopp, Dictionary of Caribbean English usage. With a French and Spanish supplement edited by Jeanette Allsopp. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. lxxviii + 697 pp.-Geneviève Escure, Jacques Arends ,Pidgins and Creoles: An introduction. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1995. xiv + 412 pp., Pieter Muysken, Norval Smith (eds)-Jacques Arends, Angela Bartens, Die iberoromanisch-basierten Kreolsprachen: Ansätze der linguistischen Beschreibung. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1995. vii + 345 pp.-J. Michael Dash, Richard D.E. Burton, Le roman marron: Études sur la littérature martiniquaise contemporaine. Paris: L'Harmattan. 1997. 282 pp.
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15

Kimbrough, Robert C. "A Most Satisfactory Man: The Story of Theodore Brevard Hayne, Last Martyr of Yellow Fever Charles S. BryanA Most Satisfactory Man: The Story of Theodore Brevard Hayne, Last Martyr of Yellow Fever Charles S. Bryan Spartenburg, SC: Reprint Company, for the Waring Library Society, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, 1996, ix + 166 p., US $19.95." Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 17, no. 1 (April 2000): 285–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cbmh.17.1.285.

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16

Cafiero, Rebecca M., Steven Holshouser, Craig Kutz, Julie Kanter, and Patrick Woster. "Novel Epigenetic Modulators That Promote Fetal Hemoglobin Production for the Prevention of Sickle Cell Disease Related Complications." Blood 126, no. 23 (December 3, 2015): 973. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v126.23.973.973.

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Abstract Background: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the most common inherited blood disorder in the United States. Affected patients are at risk of multi-organ complications, significant morbidity and early mortality with an average age at death of 42 and 48 years for men and women, respectively. Complications include acute and chronic pain due to vascular occlusion, end organ damage, acute chest syndrome and increased risk of sepsis. SCD is caused by a point mutation on chromosome 11, which codes for the beta chain of adult hemoglobin. Fetal hemoglobin is not affected by the mutation. Persons with SCD who maintain persistent fetal hemoglobin demonstrate a decreased number of pain crises and acute chest episodes along with a decreased risk of mortality compared to other patients with SCD. The only FDA approved fetal hemoglobin inducer, Hydroxyurea, remains highly underutilized due to the risk of complications and unwanted side effects. The discovery of a new agent that promotes re-expression of fetal hemoglobin could revolutionize the care of affected patients by reducing morbidity and mortality. Epigenetic modulation is one possible mechanistic approach to accomplish this goal. Recent studies with lysine specific demethylase-1 (LSD1) inhibitors, including tranylcypromine (TCP) have shown promising results. Unfortunately, TCP also affects monoamine oxidase and thus has significant side effects. Developing a molecule with high specificity, low cross reactivity and negligible toxicity would increase desired effects while reducing unwanted side effects. Objectives: To discover small-molecule inhibitors of LSD1 that exhibit high selectivity for LSD1 and low in-vivo toxicity that can be used to promote re-expression of fetal hemoglobin in SCD patients. Design/Methods: Our laboratory at the Medical University of South Carolina has recently described a library of potent, non-toxic LSD1 inhibitors. Our preliminary results suggest that these inhibitors show promise as fetal hemoglobin inducers. Using K562 cells, an erythroleukemic cell line known to model in-vivo hemoglobin production, we are screening this library to identify the most effective compounds using Western blotting for the gamma globin chain that is unique to fetal hemoglobin. Following identification of the most effective compounds in initial screens, we will confirm results with RT-qPCR. Subsequent studies will involve culturing and treating erythroid progenitor cells from healthy subject samples and from patients with SCD obtained through bone marrow sampling. HPLC will be used for identification and quantification of hemoglobin chains, including fetal hemoglobin, after ex-vivo treatment with selected compounds. Results: Initial results from Western blots for fetal hemoglobin (gamma globin protein) demonstrate that TCP, as well as the experimental compounds C1, 107-3 and 107-15, promote the re-expression of fetal hemoglobin in K562 cells. Experimental compounds were compared to DMSO as negative control, and hemin (10 mM) and hydroxyurea (200 mM) as positive controls. All experimental compounds evaluated are significantly less toxic than hydroxyurea, and do not impact cell viability in trypan blue exclusion studies. Conclusion: Initial studies show promising results for fetal hemoglobin production using these novel LSD-1 inhibitors. Viability data is also encouraging. Continued investigation is warranted to further investigate the efficacy of these compounds. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
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"The Newsfilm library at the University of South Carolina." Choice Reviews Online 38, no. 12 (August 1, 2001): 38Sup—106–38Sup—106. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.38sup-106.

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"The Newsfilm library at the University of South Carolina." Choice Reviews Online 37, no. 12 (August 1, 2000): 37Sup—094–37Sup—094. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.37sup-094.

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"The Newsfilm library at the University of South Carolina." Choice Reviews Online 36, no. 12 (August 1, 1999): 36Sup—083–36Sup—083. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.36sup-083.

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Strauch, Katina, and Tom Gilson. "ATG Interviews Kaetrena Davis Kendrick, Associate Librarian, University of South Carolina, Lancaster Medford Library." Against the Grain 31, no. 2 (March 1, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.7771/2380-176x.8352.

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21

"Catalogue of the Matthew and Arlyn Bruccoli F. Scott Fitzgerald Collection at the Thomas Cooper Library, the University of South Carolina. Park Bucker , Jamie S. Hansen." Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 91, no. 3 (September 1997): 437–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/pbsa.91.3.24304832.

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"James Raven. London Booksellers and American Customers: Transatlantic Literary Community and the Charleston Library Society, 1748–1811. (The Carolina Low Country and the Atlantic World.) Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. 2002. Pp. xxii, 522. $59.95." American Historical Review, April 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr/108.2.483-a.

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23

Lee, Tom McInnes. "The Lists of W. G. Sebald." M/C Journal 15, no. 5 (October 12, 2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.552.

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Since the late 1990s, W. G. Sebald’s innovative contribution to the genre of prose fiction has been the source of much academic scrutiny. His books Vertigo, The Rings of Saturn, The Emigrants and Austerlitz have provoked interest from diverse fields of inquiry: visual communication (Kilbourn; Patt; Zadokerski), trauma studies (Denham and McCulloh; Schmitz), and travel writing (Blackler; Zisselsberger). His work is also claimed to be a bastion for both modernist and postmodernist approaches to literature and history writing (Bere; Fuchs and Long; Long). This is in addition to numerous “guide to” type books, such as Mark McCulloh’s Understanding Sebald, Long and Whitehead’s W. G. Sebald—A Critical Companion, and the comprehensive Saturn’s Moons: A W. G. Sebald Handbook. Here I have only mentioned works available in English. I should point out that Sebald wrote in German, the country of his birth, and as one would expect much scholarship dealing with his work is confined to this language. In this article I focus on what is perhaps Sebald’s prototypical work, The Rings of Saturn. Of all Sebald’s prose fictional works The Rings of Saturn seems the example that best exhibits his innovative literary forms, including the use of lists. This book is the work of an author who is purposefully and imaginatively concerned with the nature of his vocation: what is it to be a writer? Crucially, he addresses this question not only from the perspective of a subject facing an existential crisis, but from the perspective of the documents created by writers. His works demonstrate a concern with the enabling role documents play in the thinking and writing process; how, for example, pen and paper are looped in with our capacity to reason in certain ways. Despite taking the form of fictional narratives, his books are as much motivated by a historical interest in how ideas and forms of organisation are transmitted, and how they evolve as part of an ecology; how humans become articulate within their surrounds, according to the contingencies of specific epochs and places. The Sebald critic J. J. Long accounts for this in some part in his description “archival consciousness,” which recommends that conscious experience is not simply located in the mind of a knowing, human subject, but is rather distributed between the subject and different technologies (among which writing and archives are exemplary).The most notable peculiarity of Sebald’s books lies in their abundant use of “non-syntactical” kinds of writing or inscription. My use of the term “non-syntactical” has its origins in the anthropological work of Jack Goody, who emphasises the importance of list making and tabulation in pre-literate or barely literate cultures. In Sebald’s texts, kinds of non-syntactical writing include lists, photographic images, tables, signatures, diagrams, maps, stamps, dockets and sketches. As I stress throughout this article, Sebald’s shifts between syntactical and non-syntactical forms of writing allows him to build up highly complex schemes of internal reference. Massimo Leone identifies something similar, when he notes that Sebald “orchestrates a multiplicity of voices and text-types in order to produce his own coherent discourse” (91). The play between multiplicity and coherence is at once a thematic and poetic concern for Sebald. This is to say, his texts are formal experiments with these contrasting tendencies, in addition to discussing specific historical situations in which they feature. The list is perhaps Sebald’s most widely used and variable form of non-syntactical writing, a key part of his formal and stylistic peculiarity. His lengthy sentences frequently spill over into catalogues and inventories, and the entire structure of his narratives is list-like. Discrete episodes accumulate alongside each other, rather than following a narrative arc where episodes of suspenseful gravity overshadow the significance of minor events. The Rings of Saturn details the travels of Sebald’s trademark, nameless, first person narrator, who recounts his trek along the Suffolk coastline, from Lowestoft to Ditchingham, about two years after the event. From the beginning, the narrative is framed as an effort to organise a period of time that lacks a coherent and durable form, a period of time that is in pieces, fading from the narrator’s memory. However, the movement from the chaos of forgetting to the comparatively distinct and stable details of the remembered present does not follow a continuum. Rather, the past and present are both constituted by the force of memory, which is continually crystallising and dissolving. Each event operates according to its own specific arrangement of emphasis and forgetting. Our experience of memory in the present, or recollective memory, is only one kind of memory. Sebald is concerned with a more pervasive kind of remembering, which includes the vectorial existence of non-conscious, non-human perceptual events; memory as expressed by crystals, tree roots, glaciers, and the nested relationship of fuel, fire, smoke, and ash. The Rings of Saturn is composed of ten chapters, each of which is outlined in table form at the book’s beginning. The first chapter appears as: “In hospital—Obituary—Odyssey of Thomas Browne’s skull—Anatomy lecture—Levitation—Quincunx—Fabled creatures—Urn burial.” The Rings of Saturn is of course hardly exceptional in its use of this device. Rather, it is exemplary concerning the repeated emphasis on the tension between syntactical and non-syntactical forms of writing, among which this chapter breakdown is included. Sebald continually uses the conventions of bookmaking in subtle though innovative ways. Each of these horizontally linked and divided indices might put the reader in mind of Thomas Browne’s urns, time capsules from the past, the unearthing of which is discussed in the book’s first chapter (25). The chapter outlines (and the urns) are containers that preserve a fragmentary and suggestive history. Each is a perspective on the narrator’s travels that abstracts, arranges, and uniquely refers to the narrative elaborations to come.As I have already stressed, Sebald is a writer concerned with forms of organisation. His works account for a diverse range of organisational forms, some of which instance an overt, chronological, geometric, or metrical manipulation of space and time, such as grids, star shapes, and Greenwich Mean Time. This contrasts with comparatively suggestive, insubstantial, mutable forms, including various meteorological phenomena such as cloudbanks and fog, dust and sand, and as exemplified in narrative form by the haphazard, distracted assemblage of events featured in dreams or dream logic. The relationship between these supposedly opposing tendencies is, however, more complex and paradoxical than might at first glance appear. As Sebald warily reminds us in his essay “A Little Excursion to Ajaccio,” despite our wishes to inhabit periods of complete freedom, where we follow our distractions to the fullest possible extent, we nonetheless “must all have some more or less significant design in view” (Sebald, Campo 4). It is not so much that we must choose, absolutely, between form and formlessness. Rather, the point is to understand that some seemingly inevitable forms are in fact subject to contingencies, which certain uses deliberately or ignorantly mask, and that simplicity and intricacy are often co-dependent. Richard T. Gray is a Sebald critic who has picked up on the element in Sebald’s work that suggests a tension between different forms of organisation. In his article “Writing at the Roche Limit,” Gray notes that Sebald’s tendency to emphasise the decadent aspects of human and natural history “is continually counterbalanced by an insistence on order and by often extremely subtle forms of organization” (40). Rather than advancing the thesis that Sebald is exclusively against the idea of systematisation or order, Gray argues that The Rings of Saturn models in its own textual make-up an alternative approach to the cognitive order(ing) of things, one that seeks to counter the natural tendency toward entropic decline and a fall into chaos by introducing constructive forces that inject a modicum of balance and equilibrium into the system as a whole. (Gray 41)Sebald’s concern with the contrasting energies exemplified by different forms extends to his play with syntactical and non-syntactical forms of writing. He uses lists to add contrast to his flowing, syntactically intricate sentences. The achievement of his work is not the exclusive privileging of either the list form or the well-composed sentence, but in providing contexts whereby the reader can appreciate subtle modulations between the two, thus experiencing a more dynamic and complex kind of narrative time. His works exhibit an astute awareness of the fact that different textual devices command different experiences of temporality, and our experience of temporality in good part determines our metaphysics. Here I consider two lists featured in The Rings of Saturn, one from the first chapter, and one from the last. Each shows contrasting tendencies concerning systems of organisation. Both are attributable to the work of Thomas Browne, “who practiced as a doctor in Norwich in the seventeenth century and had left a number of writings that defy all comparison” (Sebald, Rings 9). The Rings of Saturn is in part a dialogue across epochs with the sentiments expressed in Browne’s works, which, according to Bianca Theisen, preserve a kind of reasoning that is lost in “the rationalist and scientific embrace of a devalued world of facts” (Theisen 563).The first list names the varied “animate and inanimate matter” in which Browne identifies the quincuncial structure, a lattice like arrangement of five points and intersecting lines. The following phenomena are enumerated in the text:certain crystalline forms, in starfish and sea urchins, in the vertebrae of mammals and the backbones of birds and fish, in the skins of various species of snake, in the crosswise prints left by quadrupeds, in the physical shapes of caterpillars, butterflies, silkworms and moths, in the root of the water fern, in the seed husks of the sunflower and the Caledonian pine, within young oak shoots or the stem of the horse tail; and in the creations of mankind, in the pyramids of Egypt and the mausoleum of Augustus as in the garden of King Solomon, which was planted with mathematical precision with pomegranate trees and white lilies. (Sebald, Rings 20-21)Ostensibly quoting from Browne, Sebald begins the next sentence, “Examples might be multiplied without end” (21). The compulsion to list, or the compulsiveness expressed by listing, is expressed here in a relationship of dual utility with another, dominant or overt, kind of organisational form: the quincunx. It is not the utility or expressiveness of the list itself that is at issue—at least in the version of Browne’s work preserved here by Sebald. In W. G. Sebald: Image, Archive, Modernity, Long notes the historical correspondences and divergences between Sebald and Michel Foucault (2007). Long interprets Browne’s quincunx as exemplifying a “hermeneutics of resemblance,” whereby similarities among diverse phenomena are seen as providing proof of “the universal oneness of all things” (33). This contrasts with the idea of a “pathological nature, autonomous from God,” which, according to Long, informs Sebald’s transformation of Browne into “an avatar of distinctly modern epistemology” (38). Long follows Foucault in noting the distinction between Renaissance and modern epistemology, a distinction in good part due to the experimental, inductive method, the availability of statistical data, and probabilistic reasoning championed in the latter epoch (Whitehead; Hacking). In the book’s final chapter, Sebald includes a list from Browne’s imaginary library, the “Musæum Clausium.” In contrast to the above list, here Sebald seems to deliberately problematise any efforts to suggest an abstract uniting principle. There is no evident reason for the togetherness of the discrete things, beyond the mere fact that they happen to be gathered, hypothetically, in the text (Sebald, Rings 271-273). Among the library’s supposed contents are:an account by the ancient traveller Pytheas of Marseilles, referred to in Strabo, according to which all the air beyond thule is thick, condensed and gellied, looking just like sea lungs […] a dream image showing a prairie or sea meadow at the bottom of the Mediterranean, off the coat of Provence […] and a glass of spirits made of æthereal salt, hermetically sealed up, of so volatile a nature that it will not endure by daylight, and therefore shown only in winter or by the light of a carbuncle or Bononian stone. (Sebald, Rings 272-73)Unlike the previous example attributed to Browne, here the list coheres according to the tensions of its own coincidences. Sebald uses the list to create spontaneous organisations in which history is exhibited as a complex mix of fact and fantasy. More important than the distinction between the imaginary and the real is the effort to account for the way things uniquely incorporate aspects of the world in order to be what they are. Human knowledge is a perspective that is implicated in, rather than excluded from, this process.Lists move us to puzzle over the criteria that their togetherness implies. They might be used inthe service of a specific paradigm, or they might suggest an imaginable but as yet unknown kind of systematisation; a specific kind of relationship, or simply the possibility of a relationship. Take, for example, the list-like accumulation of architectural details in the following description of the decadent Sommerleyton Hall, featured in chapter II: There were drawing rooms and winter gardens, spacious halls and verandas. A corridor might end in a ferny grotto where fountains ceaselessly plashed, and bowered passages criss-crossed beneath the dome of a fantastic mosque. Windows could be lowered to open the interior onto the outside, and inside the landscape was replicated on the mirror walls. Palm houses and orangeries, the lawn like green velvet, the baize on the billiard tables, the bouquets of flowers in the morning and retiring rooms and in the majolica vases on the terrace, the birds of paradise and the golden peasants on the silken tapestries, the goldfinches in the aviaries and the nightingales in the garden, the arabesques in the carpets and the box-edged flower beds—all of it interacted in such a way that one had the illusion of complete harmony between the natural and the manufactured. (Sebald, Rings 33-34)This list shifts emphasis away from preconceived distinctions between the natural and the manufactured through the creation of its own unlikely harmony. It tells us something important about the way perception and knowledge is ordered in Sebald’s prose. Each encounter, or historically specific situation, is considered as though it were its own microworld, its own discrete, synecdochic realisation of history. Rather than starting from the universal or the meta-level and scaling down to the local, Sebald arranges historically peculiar examples that suggest a variable, contrasting and dynamic metaphysics, a motley arrangement of ordering systems that each aspire to but do not command universal applicability. In a comparable sense, Browne’s sepulchral urns of his 1658 work Urn Burial, which feature in chapter I, are time capsules that seem to create their own internally specific kind of organisation:The cremated remains in the urns are examined closely: the ash, the loose teeth, some long roots of quitch, or dog’s grass wreathed about the bones, and the coin intended for the Elysian ferryman. Browne records other objects known to have been placed with the dead, whether as ornament or utensil. His catalogue includes a variety of curiosities: the circumcision knives of Joshua, the ring which belonged to the mistress of Propertius, an ape of agate, a grasshopper, three-hundred golden bees, a blue opal, silver belt buckles and clasps, combs, iron pins, brass plates and brazen nippers to pull away hair, and a brass Jews harp that last sounded on the crossing over black water. (Sebald, Rings 25-26)Regardless of our beliefs concerning the afterlife, these items, preserved across epochs, solicit a sense of wonder as we consider what we might choose for company on our “last journey” (25). In death, the human body is reduced to a condition of an object or thing, while the objects that accompany the corpse seem to acquire a degree of potency as remnants that transcend living time. Life is no longer the paradigm through which to understand purpose. In their very difference from living things these objects command our fascination. Eric Santner coins the term “undeadness” to name the significance of this non-living agency in Sebald’s prose (Santner xx). Santner’s study places Sebald in a linage of German-Jewish writers, including Walter Benjamin, Franz Kafka, and Paul Celan, whose understanding of “the human” depends crucially on the concept of “the creature” or “creatureliness” (Santner 38-41). Like the list of items contained within Sommerleyton Hall, the above list accounts for a context in which ornament and utensil, nature and culture, are read according to their differentiated togetherness, rather than opposition. Death, it seems, is a universal leveller, or at least a different dimension in which symbol and function appear to coincide. Perhaps it is the unassuming and convenient nature of lists that make them enduring objects of historical interest. Lists are a form of writing to which we appeal for immediate mnemonic assistance. They lack the artifice of a sentence. While perhaps not as interesting in the present that is contemporary with their usefulness (a trip to the supermarket), with time lists acquire credibility due to the intimacy they share with mundane, diurnal concerns—due to the fact that they were, once upon a time, so useful. The significance of lists arrives anachronistically, when we look back and wonder what people were really up to, or what our own concerns were, relatively free from fanciful, stylistic adornment. Sebald’s democratic approach to different forms of writing means that lists sit alongside the esteemed poetic and literary efforts of Joseph Conrad, Algernon Swinburne, Edward Fitzgerald, and François René de Chateaubriand, all of whom feature in The Rings of Saturn. His books make the exclusive differences between literary and non-literary kinds of writing less important than the sense of dynamism that is elicited through a play of contrasting kinds of syntactical and non-syntactical writing. The book’s closing chapter includes a revealing example that expresses these sentiments. After tracing over a natural history of silk, with a particular focus on human greed and naivety, the narrative arrives at a “pattern book” that features strips of colourful silk kept in “the small museum of Strangers Hall” (Sebald, Rings 283). The narrator notes that the silks arranged in this book “were of a truly fabulous variety, and of an iridescent, quite indescribable beauty as if they had been produced by Nature itself, like the plumage of birds” (283). This effervescent declamation continues after a double page photograph of the pattern book, which is described as a “catalogue of samples” and “leaves from the only true book which none of our textual and pictorial works can even begin to rival” (286). Here we witness Sebald’s inclusive and variable understanding as to the kinds of thing a book, and writing, can be. The fraying strips of silk featured in the photograph are arranged one below the other, in the form of a list. They are surrounded by ornate handwriting that, like the strips of silk, seems to fray at the edges, suggesting the specific gestural event that occasioned the moment of their inscription—something which tends to be excluded in printed prose. Sebald’s remarks here are not without a characteristic irony (“the only true book”). However, in the greatercontext of the narrative, this comment suggests an important inclination. Namely, that there is much scope yet for innovative literary forms that capture the nuances and complexity of collective and individual histories. And that writing always includes, though to varying degrees obscures, contrasting tensions shared among syntactical and non-syntactical elements, including material and gestural contingencies. Sebald’s works remind us of what potentials might lay ahead for books if the question of what writing can be is asked continually as part of a writer’s enterprise.ReferencesBere, Carol. “The Book of Memory: W. G. Sebald’s The Emigrants and Austerlitz.” Literary Review, 46.1 (2002): 184-92.Blackler, Deane. Reading W. G. Sebald: Adventure and Disobedience. Rochester, New York: Camden House, 2007. Catling Jo, and Richard Hibbitt, eds. Saturn’s Moons: A W. G. Sebald Handbook. Oxford: Legenda, 2011.Denham, Scott and Mark McCulloh, eds. W. G. Sebald: History, Memory, Trauma. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2006. Fuchs, Anne and J. J. Long, eds. W. G. Sebald and the Writing of History. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann, 2007. Goody, Jack. The Logic of Writing and the Organization of Society. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1986. Gray, Richard T. “Writing at the Roche Limit: Order and Entropy in W. G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn.” The German Quarterly 83.1 (2010): 38-57. Hacking, Ian. The Emergence of Probability: A Philosophical Study of Early Ideas about Probability, Induction and Statistical Inference. London: Cambridge UP, 1977.Kilbourn, Russell J. A. “Architecture and Cinema: The Representation of Memory in W. G. Sebald’s Austerlitz.” W. G. Sebald—A Critical Companion. Ed. J. J. Long and Anne Whitehead. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 2004.Leone, Massimo. “Textual Wanderings: A Vertiginous Reading of W. G. Sebald.” W. G. Sebald—A Critical Companion. Ed. J. J. Long and A. Whitehead. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 2004.Long, J. J. W. G. Sebald: Image, Archive, Modernity. New York: Columbia UP, 2007.Long, J. J., and Anne Whitehead, eds. W. G. Sebald—A Critical Companion. Edinburgh: Edinburgh U P, 2004. McCulloh, Mark. Understanding W. G. Sebald. Columbia, S. C.: U of South Carolina P, 2003.Patt, Lise, ed. Searching for Sebald: Photography After W. G. Sebald. Los Angeles: The Institute of Critical Inquiry and ICI Press, 2007. Sadokierski, Zoe. “Visual Writing: A Critique of Graphic Devices in Hybrid Novels from a Visual Communication Design Perspective.” Diss. University of Technology Sydney, 2010. Santner, Eric. On Creaturely Life: Rilke, Benjamin, Sebald. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2006. Schmitz, Helmut. “Catastrophic History, Trauma and Mourning in W. G. Sebald and Jörg Friedrich.” The German Monitor 72 (2010): 27-50.Sebald, W. G. The Rings of Saturn. Trans. Michael Hulse. London: Harvill Press, 1998.---. Vertigo. Trans. Michael Hulse. London: Harvill Press, 1999.---. Campo Santo. Trans. Anthea Bell. London: Penguin Books, 2005. Print. Theisen, Bianca. “A Natural History of Destruction: W. G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn.” MLN, 121. The John Hopkins U P (2006): 563-81.Whitehead, Alfred North. Science and The Modern World. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1932.Zisselsberger, Markus. The Undiscover’d Country: W. G. Sebald and the Poetics of Travel. Rochester, NY: Camden House, 2010.
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