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View Full Version : Why the archives of the greatest authors in the world end up in... Texas



jwt86
06-21-2007, 04:43 AM
One of the world's greatest libraries is in Austin...


The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, the literary archive of the University of Texas at Austin, contains thirty-six million manuscript pages, five million photographs, a million books, and ten thousand objects. It houses one of the forty-eight complete Gutenberg Bibles; a rare first edition of “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” which Lewis Carroll and his illustrator, John Tenniel, thought poorly printed, and which they suppressed; one of Jack Kerouac’s spiral-bound journals for “On the Road”; and Ezra Pound’s copy of “The Waste Land,” in which Eliot scribbled his famous dedication: “For E. P., miglior fabbro, from T. S. E.” Putting a price on the collection would be impossible: What is the value of a first edition of “Comus,” containing corrections in Milton’s own hand? Or the manuscript for “The Green Dwarf,” a story that Charlotte Brontë wrote in minuscule lettering, to discourage adult eyes, and then made into a book for her siblings? Or the corrected proofs of “Ulysses,” on which James Joyce rewrote parts of the novel? The university insures the center’s archival holdings, as a whole, for a billion dollars.


http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/06/11/070611fa_fact_max

fflint
06-21-2007, 04:49 AM
This is a 'city' discussion?

jwt86
06-21-2007, 04:57 AM
Just the fact that Austin seems an unlikely place for something so significant. It's interesting that it concerns the British so much too.

vertex
06-21-2007, 05:17 AM
It's amazing what oil money will buy...



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