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Oscar Wilde

Meet the Staff: Digital Collections Librarian Liz Gushee

June 30, 2015 - Gabrielle Inhofe

Meet the Staff is a Q&A series on Cultural Compass that highlights the work, experience, and lives of staff at the Harry Ransom Center. Liz Gushee has been the digital collections librarian at the Ransom Center since January 2011. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in History from Earlham College and a Master of Library and Information Science from Catholic University of America. Gushee is responsible for launching and managing the platform for the Ransom Center’s digital collections, which includes more than 43,000 items and continues to grow as newly digitized materials are added on a regular basis.

  [Read more…] about Meet the Staff: Digital Collections Librarian Liz Gushee

Filed Under: Books + Manuscripts, Digital Collections, Meet the Staff Tagged With: and Capacity: A Collaborative Large-Scale Digitization Project on the Long Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina, Archives of American Art Digital Collections, Content, CONTENTdm, Context, cutoverload, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Deep Eddy, digital collections, digital collections librarian, How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, In the Time of the Butterflies, Jack London, Joseph Conrad, Julia Alvarez, Liz Gushee, Meet the Staff, O. Henry, Oscar Wilde, REVEAL, Tatjana Soli, The Lotus Eaters, The Things They Carried, Thomas Hardy, Tim O'Brien

From the Outside In: Napoleon Sarony’s Portrait of Oscar Wilde, 1882

April 28, 2014 - Jane Robbins Mize

"Oscar Wilde," Napoleon Sarony, 1882

The atria on the first floor of the Ransom Center are surrounded by windows featuring etched reproductions of images from the collections. The windows offer visitors a hint of the cultural treasures to be discovered inside. From the Outside In is a series that highlights some of these images and their creators.

This image, one of a series of pictures of Oscar Wilde (1854–1900) taken by Napoleon Sarony (1821–1896), depicts the young Irishman in January 1882, shortly after he arrived in New York City to begin his 1882 tour of North America. During this year, the last year prior to his marriage to Constance Lloyd, Wilde strongly influenced the costume and style of the European Aesthetic movement, and his unique style quickly spread to the burgeoning Greenwich Village subculture.

Napoleon Sarony, famous for his publicity images of some of the most popular literary and cultural figures of the time, was aware of Wilde’s notoriety, and the photographs from this session helped propel both men in their professions. Wilde was heralded with sudden fame in America, and the Sarony photographs were used to advertise his speaking appearances throughout the country. His tour would take him across the United States and Canada to deliver an estimated 150 lectures. Although his opening lecture in New York City was poorly received, and his style was ridiculed in print by The New York Times and the Boston Evening Transcript, his eye-catching fashion choices, seen here in his velvet suit and knee breeches, were soon adopted by his fans. Among the highlights of his North American tour was a meeting with the aging poet Walt Whitman, brokered by the editor of Lippincott’s Magazine, J. M. Stoddart. Later during Wilde’s visit, Stoddart arranged a dinner party, where he convinced Wilde and Arthur Conan Doyle to submit stories to his magazine. This chance encounter would later result in Stoddart’s publication of Wilde’s controversial novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, which ultimately led to Wilde’s public fall from grace in Great Britain.

Sarony, a celebrated figure in New York photography, would soon file an 1883 copyright infringement suit against the Burrow-Giles Lithographic Company, spurred by their use of one of the prints from his sessions, Oscar Wilde No. 18, in an advertisement. The case eventually went to the Supreme Court, who, in 1884, established that Sarony was the author of “an original work of art” protected by copyright; in their unanimous decision, the Court extended copyright to photography, in line with the established protection for “all forms of writing, printing, engravings, etchings, etc., by which the ideas in the mind of the author are given visible expression.” Sarony later photographed the Supreme Court Justices who decided the case, as well as other Washington, D.C., political figures.

The Ransom Center holds extensive materials related to Wilde’s life and work, including drafts of many of his most important works, correspondence, and writings concerning Wilde by his friends. The Center also holds papers from Wilde’s companion, Lord Alfred Douglas (1870–1945), which include correspondence and versions of several works about Wilde. The collection of Frank Harris (1856–1931), Wilde’s friend and biographer, contains significant correspondence from Robbie Ross, one of Wilde’s most loyal friends, and Vyvyan Holland, Wilde’s youngest son, as well as notes and fragments from Harris’s biography of Wilde. Among materials that the Center holds by Canadian-born Napoleon Sarony are photographic images of Oscar Wilde, Walt Whitman, and Wilkie Collins.

Former Ransom Center volunteer Jessica Smith wrote this post.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: Guide to the Windows, Napoleon Sarony, Oscar Wilde

Notes from the Undergrad: The Penguin Illustrated Collapse

November 29, 2012 - Alyssa O'connell

"A Farewell to Arms" by Ernest Hemingway. 1935. This edition of "A Farewell to Arms" was part of the initial ten-book print run of Penguin’s launch in 1935. Other titles in the series included Agatha Christie’s "The Mysterious Affair at Styles" and Dorothy Sayers’s "The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club." As you can see from this cover, Penguin paperbacks emphasized the company’s branding rather than the subject or author of the work; the original covers included the trademark drawing of the penguin but only rarely included illustrations pertaining to the book’s content. The covers were color-coded: orange for fiction, green for crime, and blue for non-fiction.

Alyssa O’Connell is an English Honors junior in Professor Janine Barchas’s seminar, “The Paperback,” in which students used the Ransom Center’s collections to research the history of paperbacks. [Read more…] about Notes from the Undergrad: The Penguin Illustrated Collapse

Filed Under: Books + Manuscripts Tagged With: A Sentimental Journey, Allen Lane, Alyssa O’Connell, Books, Daniel Defoe, Edgar Allan Poe, Gertrude Hermes, Gulliver’s Travels, Gustave Flaubert, Harold Nicolson, Henry David Thoreau, Herman Melville, Jane Austen, Janine Barchas, John Lane, Jonathan Swift, Laurence Sterne, Madam Bovary, Notes from the Undergrad, Oscar Wilde, paperbacks, Penguin Illustrated Classics, Penguin Paperbacks, Pride and Prejudice, Publishing, Richard Jefferies, Robert Browning, Robinson Crusoe, Selected Poems, Some Tales of Mystery and Imagination, The Bodley Head, The Sphinx, The Story of My Heart, Typee, Undergraduate, Walden, Why Britain is at War

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