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    Houghton75

    The Houghton75 podcast presents different voices and perspectives on Houghton Library in its seventy-fifth year. Throughout 2017, Harvard’s principal repository of rare books and manuscripts is celebrating its world-class collections of primary sources, and support of research and teaching over the last 75 years. The series kicks off with Harvard faculty members sharing their thoughts on the collection item they chose for the exhibition HIST 75H: A Masterclass on Houghton Library. The chosen item acts as a springboard for a broader conversation about their research and teaching. The interviews cover topics as varied as Theodore Roosevelt as a symbol of masculinity and the history of race in American music. Visit www.houghton75.org for more information.
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    Episodes (22)

    Harvard Review Salon Series: Phillip Lopate and Lily King

    Harvard Review Salon Series: Phillip Lopate and Lily King

    Did you know that Houghton Library is also the publisher of Harvard Review, a major American literary journal? In this episode of Houghton75, editor Christina Thompson talks to two contributors to Harvard Review's 50th issue: renowned essayist Phillip Lopate and award-winning novelist Lily King. The conversation, part of the Houghton 75th celebrations, marks Harvard Review's 25th anniversary and the inauguration of our new Harvard Review Salon Series. It was held May 11, 2017, in the Edison and Newman Room at Houghton Library.

    For more information about Harvard Review, visit us at http://harvardreview.org

    Find out more about the exhibition and Houghton Library’s 75th anniversary celebrations at http://houghton75.org/

    Podcast Transcript: http://wp.me/p7SlKy-wP

    Joseph Connors: The Art of Architectural Sketching

    Joseph Connors: The Art of Architectural Sketching

    In this episode of Houghton75 we speak with Joseph Connors, Professor of the History of Art and Architecture, about the historical practice of architectural sketching and how he incorporates it into his classes. We start the conversation with the sketchbooks from the late 17th century of a young Baroque architect, Gilles-Marie Oppenord, not much older than Professor Connors’ students.

    This is our final faculty interview episode. Watch for more episodes soon, including a peek into the Harvard Review, the major American literary journal published by Houghton, and a salon series that celebrates their 50th issue.

    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-wu

    Music

    La Luna

    Sprezzatura: 17th century Italian Virtuosos Music

    (Dorian #93200)

    Tom Kelly: Ambrosian Chant

    Tom Kelly: Ambrosian Chant

    In this episode of Houghton75 we speak with Thomas Kelly, Morton B. Knafel Professor of Music about his experiences researching and teaching chant using Houghton collections. We examine the music of Ambrosian chant, the only competing tradition to Gregorian chant which still survives to this day in the area of Milan, Italy.

    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-wp

    Music

    Ambrosian chants from
    Antifonale Ambrosiano (LIM, Lucca), directed by Giovanni Scomparin

    Stephen Greenblatt: On the Nature of Science and the Humanities

    Stephen Greenblatt: On the Nature of Science and the Humanities

    In this episode of Houghton75 we speak with Stephen Greenblatt, John Cogan University Professor of the Humanities, about a small, very fragile book containing an ancient poem that rocked the world, and what it says about the inter-connectivity of the sciences and the humanities.

    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-wg

    Music

    De Rerum Natura

    by Robert Xavier Rodriguez

    G. Schirmer, publisher. Recorded by Albany Records (TROY1479).

    Ann Blair: Renaissance Writing Tables

    Ann Blair: Renaissance Writing Tables

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Ann Blair, Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor at Harvard, about the development of note-taking devices from early wax tablets to our modern smartphones. We start with an early modern writing tablet - a small reference book which also contains specially treated pages for recording notes while on the road.

    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-w1

    Music

    From La Luna (Ensemble for 17th Century Music), Wild Boar Records, WLBR 9605.

    Danielle Allen: John Adams’ and Our Declaration

    Danielle Allen: John Adams’ and Our Declaration

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Danielle Allen, James Bryant Conant University Professor and director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, about her research and teaching on the Declaration of Independence, including John Adams’ role in creating it, supported by evidence found right here at Houghton.

    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-vC

    Music

    Fife & Drum Ensembles from the Internet Archive

    https://archive.org/

    Stephanie Sandler: The Russian Avant Garde’s Enigmatic Misfit, Elena Guro

    Stephanie Sandler: The Russian Avant Garde’s Enigmatic Misfit, Elena Guro

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Stephanie Sandler, Ernest E. Monrad Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, about one relatively unknown and enigmatic artist from the time of the Russian Revolution, 100 years ago this year. Featuring special guest host Christine Jacobson.

    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-vz

    Music

    Historic reproducing piano rolls from The Pianola Institute

    http://www.pianola.org

    Racha Kirakosian: A Manuscript’s Never Ending Story

    Racha Kirakosian: A Manuscript’s Never Ending Story

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Racha Kirakosian, Assistant Professor of German and the Study of Religion at Harvard, about one of the newer acquisitions in our collection. Close study of this colorful medieval manuscript, and other such manuscripts, can reveal where they were made, who they were written by, where they were used, who they were made for, and much more.

    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-ui

    Music

    Lorelei Ensemble

    http://www.loreleiensemble.com

    Michael Canfield: Teddy Roosevelt in the Field

    Michael Canfield: Teddy Roosevelt in the Field

    Hunter, Soldier, President, Naturalist, Rough Rider. In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Michael Canfield, a lecturer in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard and author of Theodore Roosevelt in the Field, about the complex legacy of America’s 26th President.

    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-rH

    Music

    Public Domain recordings from the Internet Archive http://archive.org

    Alex Csiszar: Amping up Scientific Publishing

    Alex Csiszar: Amping up Scientific Publishing

    Did you know that the phrase “amp it up” is a tribute to a 19th century French scientist? In this episode of Houghton75 we speak with Alex Csiszar, Associate Professor of the History of Science, about his research on Andre Marie Ampére's electromagnetic experiments and his equally remarkable experiments in scientific publishing.

    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-oQ

    Music

    Dara O Shayda

    https://soundcloud.com/dara-o-shayda

    Kate van Orden: Renaissance Music Printing and Performance

    Kate van Orden: Renaissance Music Printing and Performance

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Kate van Orden, Dwight P. Robinson Jr. Professor of Music. Her selection for our recent exhibition was a 16th century partbook printed by the first music publisher. The book contained the tenor lines of multiple Masses by Josquin de Prez, a master of Renaissance polyphony and one of the first composers whose works were widely disseminated in both manuscript and print.

    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-oD

    Music

    Cut Circle. Jesse Rodin, artistic director
    http://cutcircle.org

    Selections from Missa L’homme armé super voces musicales by Josquin de Prez

    Christie McDonald: Life and Art in the Ituri Rainforest

    Christie McDonald: Life and Art in the Ituri Rainforest

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Christie McDonald, Smith Professor of French Language and Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature, about a fascinating painting by her aunt, Anne Eisner Putnam, entitled “Beauty Salon.” Putnam lived and worked with the Bantu and Mbuti peoples in the 1940s and 1950s in the Belgian Congo (what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo).

    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-nX

    Music

    From Mbuti Pygmies of the Ituri Rainforest, recorded by Colin Turnbull and Francis S. Chapman. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, 1992. Catalog number SFW40401.
    http://www.folkways.si.edu/mbuti-pygmies-of-the-ituri-rainforest/world/music/album/smithsonian

    Tom Conley: A Kinder, Gentler Map

    Tom Conley: A Kinder, Gentler Map

    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/

    James Engell: Anti-War Sentiment on the University Campus

    James Engell: Anti-War Sentiment on the University Campus

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with James Engell, Gurney Professor of English and Professor of Comparative Literature at Harvard, about Charles Eliot Norton and the expression of anti-war sentiment on the university campus.
    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-nJ

    Music

    Matthew Aucoin (‘12), piano and Keir GoGwilt (‘13), violin
    Quatuor pour la fin du temps VIII. Louange à l'Immortalité de Jésus
    From “Seamus Heaney: A Memorial Celebration (Nov 7, 2013)”
    http://hcl.harvard.edu/poetryroom/listeningbooth/

    Deidre Lynch: Loving Shakespeare Too Much

    Deidre Lynch: Loving Shakespeare Too Much

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Deidre Lynch, Ernest Bernbaum Professor of Literature, to discuss one of the most audacious literary hoaxes in history, masterminded by a teenage fan turned fanatic. Featuring special guest host Dale Stinchcomb. 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-nD

    Renaissance string ensemble music by The King’s Noyse.

    Eric Nelson: Hebraism, Monarchy, and the American Revolution

    Eric Nelson: Hebraism, Monarchy, and the American Revolution

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Eric Nelson, Robert M. Beren Professor of Government at Harvard, to discuss the surprising impact of John Milton and a set of once forgotten rabbinical texts on the formation of the government of the United States. The story starts with Wilhelm Schickard, a Christian Hebraist, monarchist, and the most important early modern political theorist you’ve never heard of, who in the early 17th century set out to compile all rabbinic references to monarchy. Schickard’s book is in our current exhibition, where it can be viewed through April 22, 2017. 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-ns

    Music

    The Boston Camerata. Anne Azéma, artistic director
    http://www.bostoncamerata.org/

    Recording from Rosh Hashanah at the Park Avenue Synagogue, New York City
    Cantor Azi Schwartz, voice
    Colin Fowler and the PAS choir, music
    Doug Yoel, recording

    Elaine Scarry: Charlotte Brontë’s Miniature Books

    Elaine Scarry: Charlotte Brontë’s Miniature Books

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak to Elaine Scarry, Walter M. Cabot Professor of Aesthetics and General Theory of Value at Harvard. She discusses a collection of miniature books handmade by the Brontës as children. This collection of nine miniature books provides a rare glimpse into the developing voices of the Brontë sisters, who write with authority even as children. These miniature manuscripts are on display in our current exhibition, where it can be viewed through April 22, 2017. 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-nc

    Music:
    Fanny Mendelssohn’s Piano Trio in d minor, Op. 11, from Musica Omnia: Felix & Fanny Mendelssohn: Piano Trios MO 0105, The Atlantis Trio
    http://www.musicaomnia.org/release/felix-fanny-mendelssohn-piano-trios-op-66-op-16/

    Elaheh Kheirandish: Ibn al-Haytham and the works of Islamic Science

    Elaheh Kheirandish: Ibn al-Haytham and the works of Islamic Science

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak to Elaheh Kheirandish, Postdoctoral Associate of the Department of History of Art and Architecture at Harvard. For our current exhibition, she has chosen a copy of Alhazen’s Optics in Latin from 1572. She’ll delve into some of Alhazen’s importance to the science of Optics, and his place in the creation and transmission of scientific learning through the Islamic world and to the west. 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-n6

    Music by دنگ شو Dang Show‎
    http://www.facebook.com/dangshow

    Additional Music Performed by
    Mohammad Reza Haeri (setar) and Hormoz Goodarzy (tonbak)

    Daniel Donoghue: Fragments of Anglo-Saxon England

    Daniel Donoghue: Fragments of Anglo-Saxon England

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with Daniel Donoghue, John P. Marquand Professor of English. It is a glimpse into the ancient past of England when the world was approaching the first millennium, literature and poetry were shared mainly orally, and the languages spoken by both the clergy and lay people were very different from today. The manuscript fragment Prof. Donoghue chose is on display in our current exhibition, where it can be viewed through April 22, 2017. 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-mt

    Music by Blue Heron
    http://blueheron.org

    Daniel Donoghue’s reading of Beowulf from the Woodberry Poetry Room’s Listening Booth
    http://hcl.harvard.edu/poetryroom/listeningbooth/

    John Stauffer: Wanted Posters, Photography, and the Search for Lincoln’s Assassins

    John Stauffer: Wanted Posters, Photography, and the Search for Lincoln’s Assassins

    In this episode of Houghton75, we speak with John Stauffer, Professor of English as well as African and African American Studies, about the wanted poster that was integral to finding and capturing the assassin (John Wilkes Booth) of President Lincoln and his conspirators. The poster was one of the first to have photographs, but those on Houghton’s copy aren’t quite what they seem. The poster is on display in our current exhibition, where it can be viewed through April 22, 2017. 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-mo

    Louis Moreau Gottschalk’s “The Union (Fantasy on Patriotic Airs)” played by Alan Marks, from
    http://www.wyastone.co.uk/gottschalk-music-for-2-and-4-hands.html

    “Booth Killed Lincoln” sung by Bascom Lamar Lunsford from the Library of Congress
    https://www.loc.gov/item/ihas.200197130/

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