Reading the Beauty of Science: Discovering Books in the Portico Collection

Reading the Beauty of Science: Discovering Books in the Portico Collection

  • UNDER 14 WITH PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN

In this exploration of books in our historic collection, Jonathan Swinton looks at the beauty of science in our books.

By Portico Library

Date and time

Thursday, May 8 · 6 - 7pm GMT+1.

Location

The Portico Library

57 Mosley Street Manchester M2 3HY United Kingdom

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour
  • UNDER 14 WITH PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN
  • No venue parking

From plants to harmony to computing, come and discover the beauty of the books in our collection – even when they are falling apart. Biographer of Alan Turing and historian of science, Jonathan Swinton will be in conversation with cultural historian Debbie Challis to explain the importance of these books to understanding science and the history of Manchester.

For example, did you know we have a copy of the 1951 Manchester University Computer Inaugural Conference proceedings? Only two other copies are known. The conference included Alan Turing together with a host of names from GCHQ and, for an engineering meeting of the time. an unusually large number of women, such as the remarkable mathematical pair of Audrey Bates and Cicely Popplewell. Or on the history of the mathematics of beauty and itself a beautiful book, Hay (1842) The natural principles and analogy of the harmony of form as well as illustrated natural history books from the eighteenth century, such as the Bonnet (1779), Oeuvres d'histoire naturelle et de philosophie. These are listed in our first catalogue.

This ‘in-conversation with books’ is part of our exploration of lesser-known areas of our collection and building that is funded by the National Heritage Lottery Fund as part of our Reuniting the Portico project.

Organized by

Welcome to the Portico Library, Manchester’s original 19th-century home of literature and learning. Uncovering, imagining, and sharing new histories together. Enjoy our public programme. From talks, performances and exhibitions to awards, workshops and new research projects.