It’s hard enough to display books interestingly, but book indexes? This I have got to see, I
thought, so I travelled up to Oxford last month and picked my way through the
city’s shops, tour parties and bicycles to the Bodleian Library, where there
turns out to be… one display case.
Then there is a charming list of individual squiggles put
together by early medieval theologian Robert Grosseteste, each of which he
assigned to one of 440 topics such as ‘Imagination’ and ‘Existence of God’,
then used in the margins of books when the writers mentioned these things.
The display is thus book-ended with two concordances, the
first a necessary accompaniment to a central text of the time, the last a
private aid for an idiosyncratic artwork. But I would have liked to see a bang
up-to-date index showing the current state of the art.
But is the search box putting indexes out of business? ‘Ctrl
+F is not the same as a good subject index,’ claims the display text. Is this
true? Well, a good index is not an automatically compiled list of words but the
work of someone trained in choosing and ordering the most important names and
topics, and thus should have some intellectual credibility. An index also
offers chance discoveries – you may find things by accident when browsing
through it, not so likely when starting off with your own search terms. An
index is also I suppose a production in itself, like a noun-heavy summary of
the book with wonky syntax and a non-chronological order. And (this clinches
the deal for me) they work on paper.
A search box, by contrast, is not a work but a tool, albeit
a very powerful one.
Nevertheless, indexes will have to argue much harder for
themselves in the age of the e-book. This display, by showing that they have functioned
for hundreds of years as ways of mapping reading and thought, is part of that
argument.
The Book Index was at the Bodleian Library, Oxford from 28 May
- 9 July 2017.
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