In this episode of Houghton75 we speak with Tom Conley, Abbott Lawrence Lowell Professor of Visual and Environmental Studies and Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures, about the work of Oronce Finé, and the surprising things we can learn from maps.
Find out more about the exhibition and Houghton Library’s 75th anniversary celebrations at http://houghton75.org/hist-75h
Transcript and detailed music notes: http://wp.me/p7SlKy-nQ
Music
15th century French instrumental music performed by La Chapelle des Ducs de Savoie
http://www.ducs.ch/
“Belle, bonne, sage, plaisant” performed Martin Near, Charles Weaver, and Scott Metcalfe of Blue Heron.
http://www.blueheron.org/
Harvard Review Salon Series: Phillip Lopate and Lily King
Joseph Connors: The Art of Architectural Sketching
Tom Kelly: Ambrosian Chant
Stephen Greenblatt: On the Nature of Science and the Humanities
Ann Blair: Renaissance Writing Tables
Danielle Allen: John Adams’ and Our Declaration
Stephanie Sandler: The Russian Avant Garde’s Enigmatic Misfit, Elena Guro
Racha Kirakosian: A Manuscript’s Never Ending Story
Michael Canfield: Teddy Roosevelt in the Field
Alex Csiszar: Amping up Scientific Publishing
Kate van Orden: Renaissance Music Printing and Performance
Christie McDonald: Life and Art in the Ituri Rainforest
James Engell: Anti-War Sentiment on the University Campus
Deidre Lynch: Loving Shakespeare Too Much
Eric Nelson: Hebraism, Monarchy, and the American Revolution
Elaine Scarry: Charlotte Brontë’s Miniature Books
Elaheh Kheirandish: Ibn al-Haytham and the works of Islamic Science
Daniel Donoghue: Fragments of Anglo-Saxon England
John Stauffer: Wanted Posters, Photography, and the Search for Lincoln’s Assassins
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