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What Literature Knows: Forays Into Literary Knowledge Production
Contributions to English 2 Contributions to English and American Literary Studies 2 and American Literary Studies 2 Antje Kley / Kai Merten (eds.) Antje Kley / Kai Merten (eds.) Kai Merten (eds.) Merten Kai / What Literature Knows This volume sheds light on the nexus between knowledge and literature. Arranged What Literature Knows historically, contributions address both popular and canonical English and Antje Kley US-American writing from the early modern period to the present. They focus on how historically specific texts engage with epistemological questions in relation to Forays into Literary Knowledge Production material and social forms as well as representation. The authors discuss literature as a culturally embedded form of knowledge production in its own right, which deploys narrative and poetic means of exploration to establish an independent and sometimes dissident archive. The worlds that imaginary texts project are shown to open up alternative perspectives to be reckoned with in the academic articulation and public discussion of issues in economics and the sciences, identity formation and wellbeing, legal rationale and political decision-making. What Literature Knows The Editors Antje Kley is professor of American Literary Studies at FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany. Her research interests focus on aesthetic forms and cultural functions of narrative, both autobiographical and fictional, in changing media environments between the eighteenth century and the present. Kai Merten is professor of British Literature at the University of Erfurt, Germany. His research focuses on contemporary poetry in English, Romantic culture in Britain as well as on questions of mediality in British literature and Postcolonial Studies. He is also the founder of the Erfurt Network on New Materialism. -
The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume II
The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume II By Crashaw, Richard, 1613-1649 English A Doctrine Publishing Corporation Digital Book This book is indexed by ISYS Web Indexing system to allow the reader find any word or number within the document. CRASHAW, VOLUME II (OF 2)*** available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/toronto) Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See http://www.archive.org/details/completeworksfor02crasuoft Transcriber' note: A character following a carat is supercripted (example: y^e). When two or more characters are superscripted they are enclosed in curly brackets (example: D^{ris}). The Fuller Worthies' Library. THE COMPLETE WORKS OF RICHARD CRASHAW. In Two Volumes. VOL. II. ESSAY ON LIFE AND WRITINGS. EPIGRAMMATA ET POEMATA LATINA: TRANSLATED FOR THE FIRST TIME. GLOSSARIAL INDEX. London: Robson and Sons, Printers, Pancras Road, N.W. The Fuller Worthies' Library. THE COMPLETE WORKS OF RICHARD CRASHAW. For the First Time Collected and Collated with the Original and Early Editions, and Much Enlarged with I. Hitherto unprinted and inedited Poems from Archbishop Sancroft's MSS. &c. &c. II. Translation of the whole of the Poemata et Epigrammata. III. Memorial-Introduction, Essay on Life and Poetry, and Notes. IV. In Quarto, reproduction in facsimile of the Author's own Edited by the REV. ALEXANDER B. GROSART, St. George's, Blackburn, Lancashire. In Two Volumes. VOL. II. Printed for Private Circulation. 1873. Doctrine Publishing Corporation Digital Book Page 1 156 copies printed. PREFACE. In our Essay and Notes in the present Volume we so fully state such things as it seemed expedient to state on the specialties of our collection of Crashaw's Latin and Greek Poetry, in common with our like collection of his English Poetry in Vol. -
WARTS and ALL the Portrait Miniatures of Samuel Cooper (1609-1672)
PRESS RELEASE October 2013 WARTS AND ALL The Portrait Miniatures of Samuel Cooper (1609-1672) A major loan exhibition dedicated to the first internationally celebrated British artist, Samuel Cooper, will go display at the Philip Mould gallery from 13 November – 7 December 2013 (Preview Tuesday, 12 November). Known to his contemporaries as ‘the prince of limners’ or ‘Vandyck in little’. Lenders to the exhibition include Royal Collection Trust, The Duke of Buccleuch, Castle Howard, Burghley House, The Ashmolean Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Portrait Gallery. The exhibition takes its name from the Duke of Buccleuch’s iconic unfinished portrait of Oliver Cromwell, which, for the first time, will be hung alongside Sir Peter Lely’s identical portrait of Cromwell [on loan from Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery]. The death mask of Oliver Cromwell will also be loaned from Warwick Castle to allow visitors to compare his features to Cooper’s ad vivum sketch and subsequent portraits. As the exhibition will conclusively show, it is to Cooper that Oliver Cromwell is believed to have made clear his desire to be painted ‘warts and all’. This ambitious exhibition has been curated by Emma Rutherford, portrait miniature specialist to Philip Mould & Co, who has succeeded in securing loans from across the country to make this an outstanding show and give visitors a rare opportunity to glimpse these significant portraits together. Most have not been seen together since leaving Cooper’s studio in the 17th Century. The curator, Emma Rutherford, says “visitors to the exhibition will be able to visually follow Cooper’s career in the same way that we are able to read Pepys diary. -
List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007
Library and Information Services List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007 A - J Library and Information Services List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 - 2007 A complete listing of all Fellows and Foreign Members since the foundation of the Society A - J July 2007 List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 - 2007 The list contains the name, dates of birth and death (where known), membership type and date of election for all Fellows of the Royal Society since 1660, including the most recently elected Fellows (details correct at July 2007) and provides a quick reference to around 8,000 Fellows. It is produced from the Sackler Archive Resource, a biographical database of Fellows of the Royal Society since its foundation in 1660. Generously funded by Dr Raymond R Sackler, Hon KBE, and Mrs Beverly Sackler, the Resource offers access to information on all Fellows of the Royal Society since the seventeenth century, from key characters in the evolution of science to fascinating lesser- known figures. In addition to the information presented in this list, records include details of a Fellow’s education, career, participation in the Royal Society and membership of other societies. Citations and proposers have been transcribed from election certificates and added to the online archive catalogue and digital images of the certificates have been attached to the catalogue records. This list is also available in electronic form via the Library pages of the Royal Society web site: www.royalsoc.ac.uk/library Contributions of biographical details on any Fellow would be most welcome. -
King's Research Portal
King’s Research Portal DOI: 10.1093/res/hgw144 Document Version Peer reviewed version Link to publication record in King's Research Portal Citation for published version (APA): Moul, V. (2017). Andrew Marvell and Payne Fisher. REVIEW OF ENGLISH STUDIES, 68(285), 524–548. https://doi.org/10.1093/res/hgw144 Citing this paper Please note that where the full-text provided on King's Research Portal is the Author Accepted Manuscript or Post-Print version this may differ from the final Published version. If citing, it is advised that you check and use the publisher's definitive version for pagination, volume/issue, and date of publication details. And where the final published version is provided on the Research Portal, if citing you are again advised to check the publisher's website for any subsequent corrections. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the Research Portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognize and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. •Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the Research Portal for the purpose of private study or research. •You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain •You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the Research Portal Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact [email protected] providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. -
1 the Early Royal Society and Visual Culture Sachiko Kusukawa1 Trinity
The Early Royal Society and Visual Culture Sachiko Kusukawa1 Trinity College, Cambridge [Abstract] Recent studies have fruitfully examined the intersection between early modern science and visual culture by elucidating the functions of images in shaping and disseminating scientific knowledge. Given its rich archival sources, it is possible to extend this line of research in the case of the Royal Society to an examination of attitudes towards images as artefacts –manufactured objects worth commissioning, collecting and studying. Drawing on existing scholarship and material from the Royal Society Archives, I discuss Fellows’ interests in prints, drawings, varnishes, colorants, images made out of unusual materials, and methods of identifying the painter from a painting. Knowledge of production processes of images was important to members of the Royal Society, not only as connoisseurs and collectors, but also as those interested in a Baconian mastery of material processes, including a “history of trades”. Their antiquarian interests led to discussion of painters’ styles, and they gradually developed a visual memorial to an institution through portraits and other visual records. Introduction In the Royal Society Library there is a manuscript (MS/136) entitled “Miniatura or the Art of Lymning” 2 by Edward Norgate (1581-1650), who was keeper of the King’s musical instruments, Windsor Herald, and an art agent for “the collector Earl”, Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel (1586-1646) (Norgate 1997, pp. 1-9). Two versions exist of Norgate’s “Miniatura”, the first of which was 1 written for his friend, Sir Theodore Turquet de Mayerne (1573-1655), and a second, expanded treatise was dedicated to his patron’s son, Henry Frederick Howard, the third Earl of Arundel (1608-1652), also an art connoisseur. -
Cromwelliana
Cromwelliana The Journal of The Cromwell Association 2017 The Cromwell Association President: Professor PETER GAUNT, PhD, FRHistS Vice Presidents: PAT BARNES Rt Hon FRANK DOBSON, PC Rt Hon STEPHEN DORRELL, PC Dr PATRICK LITTLE, PhD, FRHistS Professor JOHN MORRILL, DPhil, FBA, FRHistS Rt Hon the LORD NASEBY, PC Dr STEPHEN K. ROBERTS, PhD, FSA, FRHistS Professor BLAIR WORDEN, FBA Chairman: JOHN GOLDSMITH Honorary Secretary: JOHN NEWLAND Honorary Treasurer: GEOFFREY BUSH Membership Officer PAUL ROBBINS The Cromwell Association was formed in 1937 and is a registered charity (reg no. 1132954). The purpose of the Association is to advance the education of the public in both the life and legacy of Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658), politician, soldier and statesman, and the wider history of the seventeenth century. The Association seeks to progress its aims in the following ways: campaigns for the preservation and conservation of buildings and sites relevant to Cromwell commissions, on behalf of the Association, or in collaboration with others, plaques, panels and monuments at sites associated with Cromwell supports the Cromwell Museum and the Cromwell Collection in Huntingdon provides, within the competence of the Association, advice to the media on all matters relating to the period encourages interest in the period in all phases of formal education by the publication of reading lists, information and teachers’ guidance publishes news and information about the period, including an annual journal and regular newsletters organises an annual service, day schools, conferences, lectures, exhibitions and other educational events provides a web-based resource for researchers in the period including school students, genealogists and interested parties offers, from time to time grants, awards and prizes to individuals and organisations working towards the objectives stated above. -
Library of Congress
Library of Congress Peculiarities of American cities. Willard Glazier PECULIARITIES OF AMERICAN CITIES. BY CAPTAIN WILLARD GLAZIER, AUTHOR OF “SOLDIERS OF THE SADLLE,” “CAPTURE, PRISON-PEN AND ESCAPE,” “BATTLES FOR THE UNION,” “HEROES OF THREE WARS,” “DOWN THE GREAT RIVER,” ETC., ETC. IIlustrated. LC PHILADELPHIA: HUBBARD BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, No. 723 CHESTNUT STREET. 1886. E168 .G553 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, by WILLARD GLAZIER, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. 194604 12 To her WHO IS NEAREST AND DEAREST; WHOSE HEART HAS ENCOURAGED; WHOSE HAND HAS CONTRIBUTED TO THE ILLUSTRATION AND EMBELLISHMENT OF ALL MY LITERARY WORK, This Volume IS LOVINGLY INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR. PREFACE. It has occurred to the author very often that a volume presenting the peculiar features, favorite resorts and distinguishing characteristics, of the leading cities of America, would Peculiarities of American cities. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lhbtn.05993 Library of Congress prove of interest to thousands who could, at best, see them only in imagination, and to others, who, having visited them, would like to compare notes with one who has made their PECULIARITIES a study for many years. A residence in more than a hundred cities, including nearly all that are introduced in this work, leads me to feel that I shall succeed in my purpose of giving to the public a book, without the necessity of marching in slow and solemn procession before my readers a monumental array of time-honored statistics; on the contrary, it will be my aim, in the following pages, to talk of cities as I have seen and found them in my walks, from day to day, with but slight reference to their origin and past history. -
Ffliarij Anh Itntnhinnrapfi11
THE ffliarij anh itntnhinnrapfi11 OF EDMUND BOHUN ESQ. AUTHOR OF THE 'HISTORY OF THE DESERTION ' OF THE THRONE BY KIXG J.A..."\lES II, ETC. ET<:., LICE.~SER OF THE PRESS IX THE REIGN OF WILLIA..'\I Al\"D MARY, A~'"D S1.7BSEQt,EXTLY CHIEF JUSTICE OF SOUTH CAROLIYA: ;jnfrnhudnrtJ Jllrmuir, JfoftR, nnh jfhrntrntiuns, llY S. WILTON RIX . • YIR -J"C'STUS, PROBUS, D."NOCENS, TDIERis.• )[.um.u. PRIVATELY PRINTED AT BECCLES, BY READ CRISP: M.D.CCC.LIII. ,i'·r- i .:: "' ,~ -- r·'-:-. ./ "'- ':: >✓ £ -✓~:t -::..-. I , ~ • . I .,,. 7···>-- c.>·':::£<~ - ;;.· --=_;:=:'""' -:::._-:;;...--v --~---:-- -~-~~ ., . , ~ ~:;--- . .... ._:_~ Wesl:. tnntrnts. EDITOR'S PREFACE • • page m LIST OF llLUSTRA.TIOXS • V DESCIDi'"T OF THE FA.'\IILIES OF DE BOHUS, BOHUN OF FRESSINGFIELD, BRO'Wlli"E-BORUN, ETC. facing page vu .. Dt'"TRODUCTORY :MEMOIR • page vu LIST OF EDMUND BOH'\JYS PUBLICATIOXS llXlll .. THE DIA.RIST 'TO THE READER' XXXTil 'DIA.RY OF MY LU'.E' 1 CORRESPO~"DEXCE 131 INDEX 141 .... , ,., ,..,..,,.,,...,,..,...,...,..., .. - lfihitnr' s ,rrfnrr. '-'~ HE present volume contains what is known, from his own account and from other sources, ~ of EnMIDi"l> BoHUN, a voluminous political and miscellaneous writer in the latter part of the seventeenth century. He was of a Suffolk. family; and the book is, in one view, a humble contribution to the still incomplete topography of that county. However, it is not entirely local in its bearing. The lover of the older literature meets here with one who loved it too. The student of human character may find material for thought and lessons of instruction. Now and then topics are referred to, which have long agitated and still continue to interest the world - government, freedom, protestantism, commerce, colonization. -
2020 Assessment Institute Participant List Firstname Lastname Title
2020 Assessment Institute Participant List FirstName LastName Title InstitutionAffiliation Bethany Arnold Professor/IE Lead Mountain Empire Community College Diandra Jugmohan Director Hostos Community College Jim Logan Business Officer ‐ Student Learning Texas State Technical College Jessica (Blair) Soland Faculty Manager Grand Canyon University Meredith (Stoops) Doyle Director of Service‐Learning Benedictine College (Atchison, KS) JUAN A ALFEREZ Statewide Department Chair, Instructor Texas State Technical college Executive Director, Student Affairs Assessment & Robert Aaron Planning Northwestern University Osomiyor Abalu Residence Hall Director Iowa State University Brianna Abate Associate Professor of Communication Prairie State College Marie Abate Professor and Director of Programmatic Assessment West Virginia University ISMAT ABBAS PhD Candidate Montclair State University Noura Abbas Dr. Colorado Technical University Sophia Abbot Graduate Research Assistant George Mason University Associate Professor of English/Learning Outcomes Michelle Abbott Assessment Coordinator Georgia Highlands College Talia Abbott Chalew Dr. Purdue Global Sienna Abdulahad Director Tulane University Fitsum Abebe Instructional Designer and Technology Specialist Doane University Farhana Abedin Assistant Professor California State Polytechnic University Pomona Kristin Abel Professor Valencia College Robert Abel Jr Chief Academic Officer Abraham Lincoln University Leslie Abell Lecturer Faculty CSU Channel Islands Dana Abell‐Huffman Faculty instructor Ivy Tech Annette -
An Exhibition of Miniatures by Celebrated Masters of the 16Th, 17Th
e ,._ r ,31 ' la y a. .rt .*-=;: r Y, }F 'r' zs. :T". , T y a '. .. 4 e. .. ' Yd t"S :l^ .°kw't'' ti , y . _.. ' _'Q' it".', ,.k u .. '. :. ',. ''°4, .. E ..:&. .: w.....a w.w."_ ..:isriw r.:: w::i .;..... :.:e+ .' : =:v.. :"ss - AIC .cell x" fi" ii. .e . g'ay', s' " ,," s ' i ' ' i '' ,w~"Y" l .j,' JiE"rI.J'Y3tl w 3t Y3F x ±%S Y ' L d xk4,". , . ; is _~t "*Fb V ' ' A"." . F LYE': %^ .':+ : 3 r S'n " s . y gg " I'P s { &i .: :L", ? f ,l''. ;:;, .:& 4rrri.1} , f X 3. ': r', . " ; . ax' I ', :'"Y; ' Nx r 1s> : ;:. F .. hWrM': wi K ?ny a ' NS'VI qu4xbib tiou of %Ilin liaturr 4letbrattb ~atr% onf the I ft, 17to ab 18th Qetr r M. KNOEDLER & CO. 355 FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK 1906 GOERCK ART PRESS SEVENTH AVE. AT FIFTY-THIRD ST. N EW YO0R K ntrobuction The well-known English writer, J. J. Foster, in his comprehensive work entitled, "British Miniature Paint- ers and Their Works," gives a most interesting account of the history and periods of this delightful branch of art. He says in part in his introductory chapter: "Viewed from the artistic standpoint, fine miniatures possess technical features of delicacy and of beauty peculiar to themselves; whilst, as historical illustrations, genuine portraits lend, it must be owned, a living inter- est to our annals still greater than they already pos- sess. 'We see the faithful effigies of those who have played extraordinary parts and proved themselves se- lect men amongst men; we read their countenances, we trace their characters and conduct in the unreal images, and then, as if made free of their company, follow on with redoubled animation the events in which they lived and moved and had their being.' Hence authentic portraits are things of real and deep importance to students of Art, of History, of Literature, of Cus- tume, and I know not what other branches of that most fascinating study-the Past. -
The Latin-English Bilingualism of Seventeenth Century English Poetry Remains Barely Explored, And, with the Exceptio
1 ANDREW MARVELL AND PAYNE FISHER Abstract: The Latin-English bilingualism of seventeenth century English poetry remains barely explored, and, with the exception of studies of Milton, almost no work has attempted to map the interaction between major English and Latin poems of the period, even when such works were produced in close temporal and geographical proximity and on the same events. This article explores the significance of such interactions through an examination of the relationship between Andrew Marvell's English political poetry of the 1650s and the work of Payne Fisher, Cromwell's poet, who produced a stream of major Latin works in that decade, issued in fine editions several of which were sent abroad to solicit international support for the Commonwealth and Protectorate. With the work of David Norbrook, Nigel Smith, Blair Worden, Nicholas McDowell, James Loxley, Paul Davis and others, the intertextual connections of Marvell's verse has been particularly well explored; but where Fisher's work has been mentioned in passing in relation to Marvell, comment has almost always depended upon Thomas Manley's workmanlike 1652 translation of just one of Fisher's works, not upon Fisher's Latin itself, and has depicted Fisher as the secondary poet, dependent upon or imitative of Marvell. The evidence suggests that the influence ran mostly in the other direction. Marvell and Fisher were both drawing on, and contributing to, a distinctive political poetry of the Protectorate, and our appreciation of both poets is improved by reading them