Tuesday, October 31, 2023

The History and Typography of Italy's Oldest Newspaper

October sees many themes and special events at San Francisco Public Libary¡VIVA!, FILAM, and pumpkin contests, just to name a few. On a national scale, it also happens to be Italian American Heritage month. Let's talk Italy and newspapers on this ultimate day of October. 

The Gazzetta di Parma

When you think of Parma in the North of Italy (link to Google Maps), you probably think about its famous cheese and prosciutto. Maybe you also think of its architecture and theater. Do you think of its newspaper?

Italy's oldest continually operating newspaper is one of the oldest in the world: The Gazzetta di Parma hails from April 19, 1735 (at least that's the oldest surviving print from the paper we have), and the newspaper has been printed every day since then. If you visit Parma, you can't help but peep newsstands with the name emblazoned on their awnings and stacks of this local newspaper for sale around town. For sure, your hotel will offer complimentary copies each morning.

Print news is alive and well in this classic Italian city!

Image of Gazzetta di Parma circa 2006. Image courtesy of Wenceslau.

The Bodoni Connection

In a city famous for the longevity of its newspaper, it makes sense the history and legacy of that paper is intertwined with the city's famous Italian typographer, Giambattista Bodoni, who printed the paper from 1772-1796. Sound familiar? Bodoni is the name of some fonts you might recognize from your computer, modern serif typefaces designed in his type's likeness. The name pays homage to this heavyweight of typography and design, who left behind many type faces in addition to those in Word that now bear his name. 

Screen shot of Bodoni fonts on MS Office
 

On display at the Bodoni Museum in the Palazzo della Pilotta in Parma is a specimen of the newspaper printed by Bodoni in 1772, the first year he began printing the publication.

Link to enlarged image

Link to enlarged image

 

A Graphic Update to Honor History

In 2021, as an homage to its history and to update its graphic impression, the Gazzetta di Parma introduced a new look: a coat of arms now appears in the masthead (first used in the newspaper in 1745 during Bodoni's term as printer), a newly minted font for titles that integrates the best features of Bodoni's work is employed in the hierarchy of type used in the body (the new font is called Gazzetta di Parma 1735), and other changes have been implemented that usher in greater readability and make room for in-depth coverage of a range of issues.

New masthead of Gazzetta di Parma featuring the coat of arms
Link to enlarged image

"It is precisely with readers in mind that for our birthday we have designed a reform that renews the graphics - to make the 'Gazzetta' more beautiful, more elegant, tidier and more readable - and enriches the contents, with new columns, more space for in-depth analysis and ever greater attention to what is happening in Italy and around the world. Naturally without betraying our local vocation. Indeed, remaining firmly attached to our tradition and our history. Because our future is in our roots." --Director Claudio Rinaldi [Translated from Italian by Google Translate]

Claudio Rinaldi, director of the Gazzetta di Parma, with Bodoni's type matrices. Tobia 1952, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

"It is a project which captures the identifying traits of the historical heritage and useful ideas for graphic culture to respond to the needs of readability, clarity and authority, typical traits of the approach of quality expressed by the Gazzetta di Parma" -- Administrative Delegate Pierluigi Spagoni [Translated from Italian by Google Translate]

Bringing It Home to San Francisco

There is a risk involved in sharing the story of this historic Italian newspaper, and that is not being able to deliver it to our SFPL users for reading and viewing. 

That's right: this is not a paper provided through San Francisco Public Library, but we wanted to share its history and typographic accolades with our newsy followers out there anyway.You can check it out on the newspaper's online reader portal.

What do you think about this in relation to our local papers, the San Francisco Chronicle and the San Francisco Examiner? Does the blackletter masthead our local papers usesuch a traditional style of  United States newspapersremain relevant in 2023, or could it do with a facelift as well? 

For Further Reading

Clough, James. "Bodoni and his roman and italic types," 26 August 2018. CAST. https://articles.c-a-s-t.com/bodoni-and-his-roman-and-italic-types-a15325d03b06

(N.A.) "Editoria: la Gazzetta di Parma rinnova grafica e contenuti," 18 April 2021. Ansa.it. https://www.ansa.it/emiliaromagna/notizie/2021/04/18/editoria-la-gazzetta-di-parma-rinnova-grafica-e-contenuti_afb6bd73-7e07-4b3c-8d81-50ce0fd89107.html

Troiano, Donat. "La Gazzetta di Parma rinnova grafica e contenuti per il 286/o compleanno," 20 April 2021. GUSTOH24. https://www.gustoh24.it/la-gazzetta-di-parma-rinnova-grafica-e-contenuti-per-il-286-o-compleanno/

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Presentation: Solidarity Journalism 101 with Mahalaya Newspaper

As part of a rich offering of programs to celebrate Filipino American History Month (October, 2023) at SFPL, the Magazines and Newspapers Center is hosting a virtual presentation on Friday, October 27.  


Solidarity Journalism 101 with Mahalaya Newspaper

Friday, 10/27/2023
2:00 - 3:00

Register Online to Attend (closed)

Learn about the basics of solidarity of reporting and how to center the stories and perspectives of your community. Mahalaya is a free community newspaper that you can pick up at one of several California locations, including the SFPL Magazines and Newspapers Center reference desk.

Presented by Casey Ticsay, Founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Mahalaya Newspaper.  

Connect:  Mahalaya Newspaper – Website | @mahalayasf - Instagram 

See event announcement on master calendar.

View other Magazines and Newspapers Center programs on the SFPL event calendar under the What's News heading

**Update October 31, 2023

After the presentation last Friday, editor Casey Ticsay shared a list of rich resources for attendees. Click through to view. 

Thursday, October 19, 2023

The Burial: From the Pages of the New Yorker to Amazon Prime Video

The Film, The Burial

Amazon Prime Video's #1 streaming movie in the US right now is The Burial, starring Tommy Lee Jones and Jamie Foxx. It's a 2+hr feature film categorized as drama and comedy coming out of Amazon Studios as an original, and it has a 90% on the Tomatometer. The promotional materials describe it as "inspired by true events." The website History vs. Hollywood published a post devoted to comparing the real people with the actors cast to play them.

 

When Amazon Studios says "inspired by true events," they mean "adapted from a long-form journalism piece published in the New Yorker at the end of the last millennium." This is because, as we found out last week, the November 1, 1999 issue of the New Yorker ran a 26-page article by Jonathan Harr in the recurring Reporter at Large section that told this very story, under the same name, on pages 70-95.

A Reporter at Large: The Burial by Jonathan Harr

Screen capture of the title of the article in the New Yorker.
Winning multimillion-dollar verdicts had become easy for Willie Gary, and he began to want something bigger. Then he met a man with a complaint against a funeral-home empire

This is where the SFPL Magazines and Newspaper Center comes in. If you're hankering to read the original piece published in the New Yorker, we have a backfile of the publication covering the time period including 1999. 

Get the Original Article

To find out about SFPL's access to the New Yorker yourself, you can easily pop the title of the publication—the New Yorker—into our Periodical Finder tool. Looking at results #2 and #3, you will see none of the electronic access from our database subscriptions goes back to 1999, so it is not possible to get a copy of the article as a PDF immediately. However, result #1 will direct you to a link called SFPL Print Collection, which opens to a record from the SFPL classic catalog. We learn from this record that the Magazines and Newspapers Center has 1999 in both paper format and on microfilm. 

As Robert Frost would say, at this point two roads diverged in a wood: shall we travel the road of microfilm, or paper? 

One could make the decision to pull the microfilm roll from the cabinets in the Magazines and Newspapers reference room, and use the microfilm scanners to create a PDF of the pages. On the other hand, one could request the Nov. 1, 1999 issue of the New Yorker at the 5th floor Page Desk, with which one could use the copy machine to scan the pages and create a PDF. Both are free options.

Screen capture of the first two pages of the article on microfilm.

Photograph of the first two pages of the article from the paper copy.

Your Choice

Which would you have chosen? Microfilm or bound in print? Or a secret third thing?

Come visit us on the 5th floor of the Main Library if you're interested in reading the source of this popular new movie and we can help you get the article in whichever format you prefer.