Skip to main content

The Librarian’s Atlas

The Shape of Knowledge in Early Modern Spain

A history of early modern libraries and the imperial desire for total knowledge.
 
Medieval scholars imagined the library as a microcosm of the world, but as novel early modern ways of managing information facilitated empire in both the New and Old Worlds, the world became a projection of the library. In The Librarian’s Atlas, Seth Kimmel offers a sweeping material history of how the desire to catalog books coincided in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries with the aspiration to control territory. Through a careful study of library culture in Spain and Morocco—close readings of catalogs, marginalia, indexes, commentaries, and maps—Kimmel reveals how the booklover’s dream of a comprehensive and well-organized library shaped an expanded sense of the world itself.

272 pages | 20 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2024

History: European History

Library Science and Publishing: Library Science

Literature and Literary Criticism: Romance Languages

Reviews

"Kimmel offers a different and stimulating perspective of early modern libraries as spaces of lively bibliographic and editorial activity. In this book, libraries are not static repositories of knowledge for individual learning pursuits, but rather evolving loci that gather intellectual communities, nurture cultural and linguistic exchanges, and develop novel forms of collection and conservation. Libraries are, in one of the book’s boldest claims, spaces that shape how the Spanish Empire perceives, constructs, and approaches the world."

Modern Philology

"Scholars interested in material culture and knowledge will find The Librarian’s Atlas a valuable resource for their own research."

Libraries: Culture, History, and Society

The Librarian’s Atlas is an early modern booklover’s dream. It invites the reader to peer over the shoulder of the creative act of world-making that took place in early modern Spanish libraries. As Kimmel masterfully shows, these libraries were not passive book repositories but vibrant and intellectually stimulating sites of knowledge creation. Their contents and organization were also political projects essential to the formation of a modern understanding of the world."

María M. Portuondo, Johns Hopkins University

“If every book is a world in itself, then a library is a collection of worlds that invites practices of mastery to keep readers afloat in an ocean of paper. Librarians, scholars, translators, and booksellers must define coordinates and draw maps to organize such an atlas. Focusing on the Escorial’s foundation in San Lorenzo and unfolding metaphors around the concept of the bibliotheca, Kimmel offers a fascinating archaeology of intellectual technologies in early modern Europe.”

Christian Jacob, École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS)

“Kimmel’s brilliant book recovers nothing less than the relationship between the library and the world at a time of unprecedented intellectual and political ambition. They came together, above all, in the complex called the Escorial, created by King Philip II and his successors outside Madrid, and Kimmel offers our richest account to date of its origins, evolutions, and afterlives.”

Bill Sherman, Warburg Institute

Table of Contents

List of Figures
Introduction Books in Place
One Hernando Colón’s Cosmography
Two Routes of Antiquarianism: From Seville to San Lorenzo
Three A Universal Library for Philip II: Juan Páez de Castro and the Escorial’s Order of Knowledge
Four Biblioteca and Biblia: Benito Arias Montano’s Logics of Place
Five This Holy Land: Semitic Philology and Peninsular Toponymy
Six Spanish Orientalism and Saʿadī Cultures of the Catalog
Conclusion: “Libraries” and the Shape of Knowledge
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press