University of Illinois RBML
@illinoisrbml.bsky.social
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Rare Book & Manuscript Library at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign | Main Library 346 | https://www.library.illinois.edu/rbx/ Follow us on Instagram (illinois_rbml) and Facebook (IllinoisRBML)!
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Shelfmarks:
Collins 1478 - Tribute to the Arts by Robert Massman (1984)
MINI01729 - Perspective peepshow Depicting a Scene in a Library by Martin Engelbrecht (1730-50)
Collins 1318 - Moby Dick Meets the Pequod by Robert Massman (1968)
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The leaves can be spaced out with accordion-like folded paper or by using a gukkasten, a peepshow viewing box that individual sheets can slide into.

The books pictured are classified as mini books, meaning they are less than three inches in height!
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What do you get when you cross a peepshow with a petite book? A peti-pshow!

A peepshow, or tunnel book, is a book format that spaces multiple illustrated leaves apart from one another to create an illusion of depth when viewed through a front opening.
A peepshow book depicting a conductor and an orchestra. A peepshow book depicting people in a library. A peepshow book depicting a whale in front of a ship.
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Pictured here are costume and set renderings of Part III, Scene 3 for a 1954 production of Romeo and Juliet by The Shakespeare Club of Stratford-upon-Avon.

Inventory Numbers:
Costume painting - 540427_081
Set painting - 540427_166
Set photo - 540427_189
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This collection contains costume plates, scene design renderings, production plans, notes, photos, and artifacts by the Motley Group, a London-based theater design firm that operated from 1932 to 1976.
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Happy American Archives Month!

To celebrate, we're highlighting one of our archival collections: the Motley Collection of Theatre and Costume Design. An added perk? It's digitized: go.library.illinois.edu/MotleyDigita...
Gouache painting of Juliet kneeling over Romeo's body while holding a dagger. Gouache painting of a darkened set, labeled "Part III Sc 3." Photo of a theatre set with stairs and an elevated platform.
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Shelfmarks:
Chirologia, or, The naturall language of the hand … whereunto is added Chironomia, or, The art of manuall rhetoricke (1644) - 808.5 B87c and IUA02077
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The International Day of Sign Languages celebrates the linguistic identities of the Deaf community and all who use sign language. John Bulwer was the first person in Britain to advocate for the education of deaf people. His 1644 book explores the communicative and rhetorical power of hand gestures.
An engraved illustration showing a grid of 24 different hand gestures, labeled with their meaning in Latin. Engraved frontispiece that includes tow classical figures, hand gestures, and an extended palm with a speaking face. Engraved frontispiece featuring several classical orators using various hand gestures for rhetorical purposes. An engraved illustration showing a grid of 24 different hand gestures, labeled with their meaning in Latin.
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Friendly reminder that tomorrow(!!!), RBML is hosting a reception to ring in our new exhibit, "Sweetbitter: The Literary Legacies and Afterlives of Sappho," from 3-5 pm.

Until then, please enjoy this timelapse video of our exhibit staff hard at work. 💪
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Join us on Friday, September 19, from 3-5 pm for a reception to open our new exhibit, "Sweetbitter: The Literary Legacies and Afterlives of Sappho." This event will feature live dance and spoken word performances, as well as a look at the exhibit!

All are welcome. Refreshments will be served.
Graphic with text: "Sweetbitter: The Literary Legacies and Afterlives of Sappho. Friday, Sept. 19, 2025. 3-5 pm in the RBML. Opening reception featuring live dance and spoken word performances."
Reposted by University of Illinois RBML
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Pepperoni pizza, anyone?

We're not quite sure why, but this week's #MarbledMonday is making us feel a bit hungry!

Whet your appetite for knowledge with Das erste Buch für Kinder, die gern bald lesen lernen wollen from @illinoisrbml.bsky.social: go.library.illinois.edu/Marbled1810
Front cover of Das erste Buch für Kinder featuring a red and orange marbled pattern
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Shelfmark:
Clay tablet with Sumerian cuneiform script - Pre-1650 MS 0272
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This clay tablet (circa 2200 BCE) is a temple record found near the ruined city of Jokha (now Umma), located in modern-day Iraq. The text is written in cuneiform, a script created by the Sumerian people that involved pressing the tip of a reed stylus into soft clay to create wedge-shaped characters.
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Visitors often ask: "What's the oldest item you have at RBML?" To which we answer: "A cuneiform tablet!"

Pictured with our tablet are examples of old and new housing, one keeping the tablet safe for the last 100 years or so, and the other supporting its preservation for even more years to come!
Sumerian cuneiform tablet in a custom enclosure. Sumerian cuneiform tablet and its new housing (top) and former housing (bottom).
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Shelfmark:
"What sort of union is the I.W.W. asking you to build?" - IUB02625
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The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) is a Chicago-based labor union established in 1905 with the goal to create "one big union" of workers across industries. This pamphlet, created in the 1930s, offers many examples of ways its readers can "act union."
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Established as a national holiday in 1894, Labor Day is celebrated each year in September to honor the achievements of workers in the United States.

RBML will be closed on Monday, September 1, in observance of the holiday and will resume our regular hours on Tuesday, September 2.
Front page of a pamphlet distributed by the IWW with text, titled "Let's Act Union: What Sort of Union is the I.W.W. Asking You to Build?" Page two of a pamphlet distributed by the IWW with text. Page three of a pamphlet distributed by the IWW with text, including the headings "Who May Join?" and "Who Belongs Now?" and a form for requesting membership or more information.
Reposted by University of Illinois RBML
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Happy first day of classes, Illini!

Get back to basics with this 1552 Abcedarium Anglico-Latinum ; protyrunculis Richardo Huloeto exscriptore from @illinoisrbml.bsky.social
Title page of Abcedarium Anglico-Latinum
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Shelfmarks:
Dogs and How to Draw Them (1944) - S.743 H67D
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Today is International Dog Day, so we're celebrating by learning how to draw some cute canine friends. Consider trying one out (or sketching your own pet) and tag us in your drawing(s)! 🐶
Book open to a page titled "The Scottish Terrier." Book open to pages that give step-by-step instructions on how to draw a simple Scottish Terrier. Book open to a page titled "The English Bulldog." Book open to pages that give step-by-step instructions on how to draw a simple English Bulldog.
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Shelfmarks (H.G. Wells Papers):
H.G. and Catherine Wells riding a tandem bicycle, undated - Picshuas Box 1
Letter to Fred J. Wells, 15 May 1896(?) - W-W-25
Letter to Fred J. Wells, undated - W-W-25
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Wells describes in his autobiography: "I learnt to ride my bicycle upon sandy tracks with none but God to help me; he chastened me considerably in the process, and after a fall one day I wrote down a description of the state of my legs which became the opening chapter..." (p. 458, Macmillan, 1934).
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English writer H.G. Wells used bicycles as a literary vehicle in many of his published works, including The Wheels of Chance (1896), which he wrote while living in the town of Woking, Surrey. Pictured here are some of Wells' drawings or "picshuas" from his time in Surrey that feature bicycles. 🚲
Drawings of H.G. and Catherine Wells riding a tandem bicycle. Letter to Fred J. Wells featuring a drawing of H.G. and Catherine Wells riding a tandem bicycle. Letter to Fred Wells featuring a drawing of a bicycle crash. Letter to Fred Wells featuring drawings of a bicycle crash.
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Haven't had the chance to check out our 2024-2025 exhibit? Time is running out! Visit RBML by the end of the week to take a look at "We are each other's harvest": Gwendolyn Brooks and the Formation of Black Literary Canon before installation begins on our next exhibit. 👀
View of the exhibit gallery with a bust of Gwendolyn Brooks in the foreground.
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Shelfmark: [Isolario] - Incunabula 852 B285Oi1485