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  • ...count for vault materials at the Folger. For more information, please read about the [[Folger vault material and image request system]].
    3 KB (511 words) - 13:38, 18 December 2017
  • ...h'' cooler and dryer. In spring and fall, the outside climate is naturally about right, and essentially only requires energy to pull it into the building an
    3 KB (467 words) - 09:20, 16 December 2016
  • ...For more information about the Folger's use of wikis, please see the pages about [[Wikipedia]] and [[Folgerpedia]]. You can read more about #1Lib1Ref on its [https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/The_Wikipedia_Library/1Li
    14 KB (2,147 words) - 10:05, 26 February 2019
  • ...formulating and sustaining communities of readers and writers, as well as about the foundations of various communal identities. ''"Let them Compleately Learn": Manuscript Clues About Early Modern Women's Educational Practices''
    13 KB (1,616 words) - 15:34, 4 August 2017
  • ...good moral behavior among young women. Mary Cowden Clarke imagined stories about the heroines before they enter their plays in ''Girlhood of Shakespeare's H Learn more about a few of Shakespeare's most famous and infamous female characters.
    12 KB (1,871 words) - 08:50, 6 November 2017
  • ...Folger promptbook in the exhibition includes a "touching and sad notation about Edmund Kean's collapse on stage" while playing Othello (Kean died not long ...costume and set designs, playbills, photographs, and more, adding details about past productions. For the exhibition, "the challenge was picking and choos
    15 KB (2,257 words) - 07:59, 15 July 2015
  • ...ppeared in the anthologies, ''Skin Deep: Black Women and White Women Write About Race'', ''Gravity Dancers'', and ''Dream Me Home Safely''. She is a regular
    3 KB (439 words) - 09:46, 27 July 2020
  • Topical headings (from exhibition headings) should precede any information about where the element was within an exhibition. * '''ex.1''': Salvador Dali. Etching from ''Much Ado about Shakespeare''. Cadaquès: Editions Graphiques Internationales, 1970. Call n
    8 KB (1,199 words) - 05:19, 22 November 2016
  • OCLC [[Connexion client|Connexion]] comes with about 15 macros pre-loaded for catalogers to use when creating and editing record <pre style="margin-left:2em">856 42 ‡u ‡z Folgerpedia article about Folger Shakespeare Library </pre>
    17 KB (2,608 words) - 08:51, 10 October 2023
  • ...bout working with an intermittently hostile natural world. We need stories about sailors and swimmers and divers to supplement our over-supply of warriors a ...reread Shakespeare and Anglo-American history with salt in our eyes. Think about how our fears of flood spill into semi-opaque affirmations and transformati
    19 KB (2,847 words) - 08:26, 13 July 2015
  • ...vents was sponsored by the Folger Shakespeare Library, [http://www.loc.gov/about/ Library of Congress] and [http://www.penfaulkner.org/ PEN/Faulkner]. ''Dis ...sts an annual exhibition each year comprised of art, photography and video about different subject matter using poetry as a tool for discussion.
    10 KB (1,459 words) - 10:11, 14 July 2014
  • ...ity engagement initiative that brought disparate publics together to think about race and religion thoughtfully and deeply, through the lens of literature a
    3 KB (487 words) - 11:07, 4 May 2020
  • ...Chocolate, visit [http://archive.fieldmuseum.org/chocolate/about.html All About Chocolate] from the [http://fieldmuseum.org Chicago Field Museum]. * What do their clothes say about them?
    7 KB (1,044 words) - 11:59, 9 July 2015
  • ...ue-perspicacity into the range of human feelings even though his knowledge about the emotions depends on a physiological and psychological paradigm we now r
    3 KB (448 words) - 13:16, 15 August 2014
  • It’s hard to appreciate or even understand medieval drama without thinking about the language in which it was written and performed. Students most often com ...ous about differences and to actively interrupt class conversations to ask about the words on the page: after all, if they are having difficulty understandi
    12 KB (1,927 words) - 16:54, 4 January 2018
  • ...ARC 21 fields for authority data | Authority]] format contains information about dates that are associated with the entity described in the record.
    3 KB (441 words) - 14:51, 14 March 2016
  • ...cripts. While at the Folger, Cook enjoyed meeting with donors and learning about their collections. Though she kept her personal collection to less than ten
    3 KB (402 words) - 12:00, 22 November 2019
  • ...nd then the Duke of York, rise against him. The play leaves us in suspense about Henry's fate by ending with the start of the Wars of the Roses—a conflict
    3 KB (523 words) - 12:10, 10 August 2020
  • ...heatres, which uses digital technology to help tourists discover and learn about the sites connected to theatre in London between 1567 and 1642. ...the digital academy. She looks at text encoding as an opportunity to think about the transformation of textual information into data.
    11 KB (1,677 words) - 14:45, 17 March 2015
  • ...ategory:Public programs|Public programs]], use this category to learn more about the many ways we share Shakespeare with the public.
    4 KB (530 words) - 09:00, 28 April 2020
  • *Make a note about anomalous characteristics of format; for example
    3 KB (425 words) - 22:07, 16 June 2017
  • ...t a semi-colon after the one-word description, then any notes you may have about the information. Write “Fields” followed by a colon and a list of the
    3 KB (461 words) - 14:31, 11 January 2015
  • Hear former Curator of Rare Books Steven Galbraith talk about this ongoing project and the importance of restoring provenance to the pamp
    3 KB (514 words) - 15:51, 31 March 2015
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Romeo and Juliet (disambiguation) ...art because of its exquisite language, it is easy to respond as if it were about all young lovers.
    9 KB (1,248 words) - 12:28, 10 August 2020
  • 11. ''Sigh No More'' (Much Ado About Nothing) <br>
    3 KB (412 words) - 15:07, 6 January 2022
  • Sir Walter Bagot's youngest son, William, who was about six when his brother Lewis died, handled his living arrangements with confi
    3 KB (516 words) - 15:10, 6 January 2017
  • ...a look at "Shakespeare through things—the things that people have created about him and their ideas of him." ...For at least 300 years, people have been asking the same set of questions about Shakespeare. The desire to understand this poet and playwright, born in 156
    12 KB (1,739 words) - 08:17, 15 July 2015
  • Little is known about the young woman who kept this school notebook. Hear Manuscript Cataloger Ka
    3 KB (527 words) - 16:25, 2 December 2016
  • | || About Cataloging... || Alt-h, a
    4 KB (565 words) - 10:49, 24 May 2022
  • **contemporary writings about European courts and rulers, especially in France, Germany, and Italy; instr
    4 KB (469 words) - 13:39, 20 January 2015
  • ...ise? who will fall? These are timeless questions about love, politics, war—about life. But the answers are uncertain, and often the successful fail, the goo ...tury, Fortune had become more an emblematic encapsulation of certain ideas about fate and chance than a goddess having influence on the world. In his book,
    7 KB (1,165 words) - 13:28, 7 July 2015
  • ...performance sourcebook of Restoration and 18th-century drama, and writing about 18th-century theatrical performances based on Shakespeare’s plays.
    7 KB (1,069 words) - 10:06, 8 August 2017
  • ...s cataloged separately. It is used in the child record to give information about the host volume, and may have reciprocal [[MARC 774 Constituent Unit Entry|
    3 KB (500 words) - 12:26, 30 August 2021
  • MARC field 655 in the bibliographic format contains information about the [[Genre and form|genre and/or form]] of an item. This field is repeatab
    3 KB (507 words) - 17:23, 29 July 2023
  • More information about this manuscript and others from this collection can be found in the [http:
    3 KB (522 words) - 15:14, 6 January 2017
  • Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humani
    4 KB (519 words) - 15:28, 4 August 2017
  • The [[O.B. Hardison Poetry Series]] presented ''I Will Tell You the Truth About This: Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War: Tracy K. Smith and Maurice Manning
    3 KB (511 words) - 13:14, 25 June 2021
  • of the Iuice, let the pot stand in the embers, about<br />
    3 KB (584 words) - 15:04, 6 January 2017
  • ...o! Shakespeare's American Tour Exhibition Material | Click here]] to learn about the First Folio that visited Wisconsin.
    4 KB (500 words) - 12:01, 28 April 2017
  • == About the sammelband ==
    10 KB (1,353 words) - 16:39, 20 January 2015
  • ...article is about Shakespeare's Birthday Sonnet Contest. For other articles about Shakespeare's Birthday, see [[Shakespeare's Birthday (disambiguation)]].'' ...ger open at this time. Please check back in Spring of 2016 for information about the next content.
    10 KB (1,730 words) - 05:14, 22 November 2016
  • ...ading’) provide good introductions to specific fields you may need to know about. Some of the later anthologies suffer from the twin evils of much DH debate ..., depending on their familiarity with the resource. They should make notes about aspects of EEBO they find unusual or surprising, and prepare to discuss how
    10 KB (1,458 words) - 09:42, 23 November 2016
  • | [https://www.loc.gov/marc/bibliographic/bd556.html Information About Documentation Note] | Publications about material
    19 KB (2,670 words) - 21:16, 3 June 2023
  • "People are thinking about London this summer with the queen's 60th anniversary and the Olympics," say ...other glimpses of London's past. "All connected. It's getting us to think about place, what difference a place makes, how people at a local level engaged w
    16 KB (2,419 words) - 09:33, 17 August 2020
  • For details about the Macro Manuscripts, containing three of the surviving morality plays wri |A copy of Aristotle's ''Physica'', about a century after its translation into Latin. Accompanied by various pseudo-A
    16 KB (2,492 words) - 12:04, 12 September 2023
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Hamlet (disambiguation)]].'' Learn about Hamlet's journey from the cast and crew of the 2011 Folger Theatre producti
    9 KB (1,328 words) - 12:07, 10 August 2020
  • Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humani
    4 KB (577 words) - 15:26, 4 August 2017
  • :::newsagents’ windows about lost cats and missing dogs.
    3 KB (490 words) - 16:25, 7 January 2021
  • ...d of access. (See the list of playbill call numbers below for information about which sub-sets have been added to Hamnet so far.) Please see Reading Room s Playbills acquired since about the 1980s are shelved at the end of the BILL Box/Vol section on Deck C, in
    7 KB (1,134 words) - 16:03, 7 September 2021
  • Finally, there's all sorts of information a person could give you about themselves that would enrich an RDA authority record, such as associated pl
    3 KB (530 words) - 15:14, 11 May 2016
  • Books and articles about the Folger
    3 KB (426 words) - 16:22, 30 March 2024
  • *Elizabeth wrote on Fortune—what could you write about? *But did you know that it also tells us about her role as the ruler of England?
    12 KB (2,127 words) - 10:42, 8 July 2015
  • ...en Jonson’s annotations as well as of his motto and signature. Information about access to the item in the Folger library’s reading room is also specified == Folgerpedia articles about Ben Jonson ==
    15 KB (2,018 words) - 06:39, 16 December 2016
  • This page answers some frequently asked questions about the Folger's transcription platform for early modern manuscripts, [[Dromio: ====Is there any general information about the tags and how to transcribe in Dromio?====
    30 KB (5,062 words) - 13:04, 9 September 2021
  • Listen to Senior Manuscript Cataloger Alison Bridger's investigative findings about this unusual manuscript almanac.
    4 KB (547 words) - 16:24, 2 December 2016
  • ...ts be [cut] off root and branch.” – King James I’s Decree to the Campbells about the MacDonalds.<br/> “We’ll rip her out, root and stem.” – Daenerys Targaryen about Cersei Lannister<br/>
    8 KB (1,248 words) - 16:37, 23 March 2020
  • MARC field 541 in the bibliographic and holdings formats contains information about the immediate source of acquisition of the described materials. This field
    4 KB (550 words) - 12:34, 7 March 2019
  • ...then jar for a while), and then strain it through a coffee filter, and add about half as much copperas and gum arabic into the mix, stir it up, and strain a
    8 KB (1,346 words) - 08:19, 6 September 2023
  • ...le attention has been paid to the language, and important questions remain about what a newly historicized engagement with the complex language of Shakespea
    4 KB (555 words) - 15:51, 2 December 2016
  • ...emories in the dead of winter, when we wish we hadn’t complained so loudly about the heat. ...ins, with wheat usually harvested in July and August. Much of what we know about historical work practices come from Labors of the Months—sequences of ima
    12 KB (2,020 words) - 10:58, 30 July 2018
  • ...theatre. If you dig deep enough, you’ll find books containing information about magic, healing potions, witchcraft and wizardry.'' ...ems you see here represent symbols, characters, and creatures you may read about in the books or see in the Harry Potter films.
    8 KB (1,235 words) - 14:49, 5 November 2018
  • 11. ''Sigh No More'' (Much Ado About Nothing) <br>
    4 KB (482 words) - 17:03, 6 January 2022
  • p''ar''ambulacyons to be made about the lib''er''tyes ones eu''er''y yere...
    7 KB (595 words) - 15:05, 6 January 2017
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[All's Well That Ends Well (disamb
    4 KB (606 words) - 08:29, 13 November 2020
  • ...your ''own'' searching, but we know our collections well and we also know about past cataloging practices at our institution - two things that put us at an If you've found incorrect information in the catalog, or you have a question about why something is described in a particular way, please feel free to email [
    34 KB (5,491 words) - 11:18, 4 May 2024
  • ...[[Buildings and grounds | Board Room]] at the Folger. For more information about paintings at the [[Folger Shakespeare Library]], please consult the article
    4 KB (604 words) - 09:29, 23 November 2016
  • Hear Games talk about the essential role Japanese women played during the country's early period Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humani
    10 KB (1,458 words) - 15:38, 4 August 2017
  • *Information about the entire volume's binding, etc., should be included in the holding record ...sed to hold 184 titles, but only 169 were acquired by the Folger, and only about half of those were still physically in the volumes when the Folger acquired
    8 KB (1,342 words) - 13:40, 13 October 2023
  • know little about the once flourishing genre of English morality plays. The ...[http://collation.folger.edu/2015/10/what-to-do-about-macro-2/ What do do about the Macro manuscripts?], October 20, 2015
    8 KB (1,207 words) - 14:18, 10 April 2019
  • ...nd migrants brought to the business of colonization, including their ideas about other peoples, their notions of the engines of economic growth, and their c Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humani
    10 KB (1,338 words) - 15:32, 4 August 2017
  • ...ybill for John Wilkes Booth in ''[[The Merchant of Venice]]'' in 1864'', ''about a year before he killed Abraham Lincoln; a costume design for Paul Robeson'
    4 KB (587 words) - 10:26, 7 December 2016
  • ...lu signed next to Shylock’s speech in ''The Merchant of Venice'', a speech about shared humanity:
    4 KB (597 words) - 15:55, 2 December 2016
  • ...u/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=120434 Peter Foulger: what we have discovered about a most remarkable man]," ''Nantucket Historical Association'', April 1983, ...ps|Halliwell-Phillipps]] collection. He rarely consulted scholarly experts about his collecting, preferring to rely on Emily's expertise. If possible, he pe
    8 KB (1,234 words) - 11:19, 27 August 2018
  • ...o! Shakespeare's American Tour Exhibition Material | Click here]] to learn about the First Folio that visited Arizona.
    4 KB (593 words) - 11:22, 28 April 2017
  • ''See the [[Talk:Nonce collections|Talk page]] for discussion about instructions given here.''
    4 KB (634 words) - 14:48, 14 March 2019
  • Amazon provides data about book sales via their interface (available in the "book facts" section of a ...r Publishing [http://dogearpublishing.net/wordpress/index.php/2010/12/post-about-publishing/ "What's Your Rank... on Amazon?"]
    4 KB (589 words) - 14:29, 11 January 2015
  • ...o! Shakespeare's American Tour Exhibition Material | Click here]] to learn about the First Folio that visited Texas.
    5 KB (609 words) - 11:58, 28 April 2017
  • ==About==
    4 KB (533 words) - 08:22, 9 July 2021
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Julius Caesar (disambiguation)]].
    4 KB (601 words) - 15:22, 8 September 2020
  • ...013)|Henry V]]</em> at Folger Theatre) directs Shakespeare’s tragic satire about the fickleness of prosperity, with Helen Hayes Award-winner Ian Merrill Pe
    4 KB (552 words) - 11:20, 4 February 2021
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Cymbeline (disambiguation)]].''
    4 KB (601 words) - 08:35, 13 November 2020
  • ...July 9, 1948, with 125001 (because it was guessed the library already had about 125,000 things) but until 2004 the following material types instead receive [[Accession slips]] numbered lower than about 200000 were often typed based only on the title page, without regard for co
    11 KB (1,607 words) - 10:25, 5 May 2024
  • ...ural roles; and its context within London and beyond. Participants learned about the purpose of the Stationers’ Register, the significance of being a memb
    4 KB (618 words) - 11:43, 4 March 2015
  • ...f Kongo in pre-colonial times. More information and statements by Limbvani about his work are available at <a href="http://boyokani-kyeseli.voila.net" targe ...as his target seems to have been the high cost of Mbeki&#8217;s denialism about HIV/AIDS. In addition, he was perceived as unaware of the real problems thr
    10 KB (1,526 words) - 12:38, 5 June 2015
  • Merge columns B-D in row 2. Place basic information about the manuscript and instructions for the transcribathon in this cell:
    4 KB (685 words) - 09:42, 1 February 2023
  • ...er we will examine manuscripts and print texts which will help us to think about the ways that women and men from this period winnowed through their possess ...s made by modern book dealers, which can sometimes be used to reveal a lot about a book's earlier history. As a medievalist and cataloguer, Kidd will also a
    14 KB (2,056 words) - 12:34, 14 February 2018
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[The Tempest (disambiguation)]].''
    4 KB (628 words) - 12:29, 10 August 2020
  • ...o! Shakespeare's American Tour Exhibition Material | Click here]] to learn about the First Folio that visited Delaware.
    5 KB (647 words) - 11:32, 28 April 2017
  • ...exts for many years, and many of his textual corrections and his decisions about characters' names have stood for centuries. ...ome the most prominent actor in the United States. What I find so relevant about this "cartoon" is that here, at the Folger, I have found the place where th
    14 KB (2,132 words) - 14:51, 14 July 2015
  • ...r Institute at West Point. As an analyst and columnist, Brooks has written about national security subjects such as automation, weapons procurement, and cyb
    4 KB (575 words) - 13:26, 10 August 2020
  • ::This book has genealogical notes about Thomas Wakefeld, first Regius Professor of Hebrew at Cambridge, on the firs ...mayer Collection which consists of British and American newspaper articles about Jews from 1665-1800.
    16 KB (2,349 words) - 14:58, 30 July 2018
  • The following list includes books by and about Shakespeare that are geared for children and were featured in the exhibitio
    7 KB (897 words) - 10:42, 2 December 2016
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Richard II (disambiguation)]].''
    5 KB (755 words) - 12:23, 10 August 2020
  • ...arly modern Christian scholars, debates about the biblical text and claims about Jewish doctrine and ritual, efforts to apply Jewish learning to such discip ...sical stamina. Saying what acting is requires learning as much as possible about what the greatest Shakespeareans make of it, and the Folger’s holdings in
    24 KB (3,570 words) - 13:10, 4 October 2019
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Twelfth Night (disambiguation)]].
    5 KB (657 words) - 12:31, 10 August 2020
  • Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humani
    5 KB (725 words) - 15:31, 4 August 2017
  • ...fascinate as meta-fictional puzzle. In the work that propelled ''the book about the writing of the book'' into international circulation, Cervantes has oft ...ed widely on manuscripts in early modern England and is currently thinking about hybrid books, early modern writing paper, and filing systems. She is also P
    19 KB (2,674 words) - 14:48, 30 June 2017
  • ...(1) Merchant of Venice, Portia's clock in the casket scene ; (2) Much ado about nothing, Beatrice in the last scene]
    6 KB (767 words) - 13:04, 20 July 2016
  • ...//folgerpedia.folger.edu/FromThePage_transcription_conventions Learn more] about transcribing on FromThePage.
    4 KB (704 words) - 08:14, 14 September 2022
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare collection development. For related articles, see [[Shakespeare
    5 KB (632 words) - 20:21, 13 February 2015
  • ....shakespeareinamericanlife.org/features/faqs/index.cfm FAQs] to learn more about Shakespeare in American life. To find Shakespeare theaters, festivals, and ...mericanlife.org/resources/links.cfm list of websites] to learn more online about Shakespeare in American life.
    13 KB (1,782 words) - 08:25, 10 July 2015
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[The Two Gentlemen of Verona (disa
    5 KB (672 words) - 07:38, 4 September 2020
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Henry VIII (disambiguation)]].''
    5 KB (652 words) - 08:38, 13 November 2020
  • ...nd encoding. EMMO will be the the subject of—and occasion for—a conference about the influence of digital scholarship on manuscript studies as well as the w
    5 KB (628 words) - 13:49, 17 May 2017
  • The Folger collection includes over 1,800 promptbooks, about half of which are for Shakespearean productions. Strictly speaking, “prom ...omptbook'', not the published text. Add a 787 field to provide information about the published text:
    13 KB (1,845 words) - 09:47, 14 August 2023
  • ''This article is about a performance of Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Twelfth Night (d
    5 KB (664 words) - 12:02, 4 February 2021
  • Hear director Robert Richmond and Drew Cortese (King Richard III) chat about the production with WJLA-TV's morning talk show, "Let's Talk Live."
    5 KB (651 words) - 11:14, 18 August 2021
  • ...friends. She married Sir Robert Wroth (c.1576–1614) on September 27, 1604. About a month before his death on March 14, 1614, Wroth gave birth to a son, Jame ...Duke of of Buckingham and favorite of James I, Wroth does not deny knowing about ''Urania's'' publication. She also made some textual corrections to her own
    15 KB (2,339 words) - 09:27, 7 December 2015
  • ...ber 16, 2016 – Emory Cinematheque presents Shakespeare in Film: ''Much Ado About Nothing'' ...o! Shakespeare's American Tour Exhibition Material | Click here]] to learn about the First Folio that visited Georgia.
    10 KB (1,388 words) - 11:34, 28 April 2017
  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Antony and Cleopatra (disambiguat
    5 KB (678 words) - 12:03, 10 August 2020
  • ...own the meta-analytic register so that participants could think critically about the uses to which a particular tool, approach, or methodology might serve i
    5 KB (701 words) - 08:31, 27 July 2017
  • ...removed. Imagine the scene in your mind as if you were watching it. Think about the places it would make sense for the characters to enter and exit and mov
    5 KB (734 words) - 09:15, 9 July 2015
  • ...ue-perspicacity into the range of human feelings even though his knowledge about the emotions depends on a physiological and psychological paradigm we now r ...s will be taken into account. Secondary literature, such as recent debates about the "stigma of print" thesis, will be sampled, but the main emphasis will b
    23 KB (3,385 words) - 13:28, 30 June 2017
  • ...forming conditions in the prison, he was ultimately successful in bringing about positive change. He was released from prison in February 1984, and continue
    4 KB (695 words) - 16:16, 2 December 2016
  • about .x. of the clock in the morning vpo''n'' the
    5 KB (730 words) - 15:06, 6 January 2017
  • ...ngs-acquired-by-Bodleian-Libraries news item by Culture24] for information about the Pirie manuscripts acquired by the Bodleian Library. ''' 474. ''' Howard, Sir Robert. A.L.S. to Thomas Clifford about his poem "The Duel of the Stags". 26 July, 1668. [http://www.sothebys.com/e
    19 KB (2,364 words) - 18:50, 29 November 2017
  • ...colloquium will pursue theoretical, methodological, and critical questions about “a range of identity positions” in the context of “systems of power� ...do need to have a working sense of certain histories and shared hypotheses about textual transmission, and of course they also need familiarity with a genea
    15 KB (2,177 words) - 09:44, 18 March 2024
  • Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humani
    5 KB (733 words) - 15:27, 4 August 2017
  • ...ord (Queen Elizabeth) and Kate Eastwood Norris (Mary, Queen of Scots) talk about the most storied rivalry in English history.
    5 KB (652 words) - 11:36, 4 February 2021
  • Allow about 20 minutes to reach the Folger by bus or metro. Going by metro involves mor
    4 KB (677 words) - 14:49, 16 December 2016
  • ...teness to certain types of projects. A semantic arrangement of information about text (rather than, say, an alphabetical organization) lends itself to techn
    5 KB (722 words) - 14:13, 30 August 2016
  • ...ttps://www.folger.edu/fellowships Dr. Amanda Herbert], with any questions about the process of applying for or holding a fellowship.
    5 KB (807 words) - 12:29, 15 February 2018
  • ...e for anyone who wants the chance to see this historic book and learn more about the Bard.
    5 KB (792 words) - 15:38, 9 August 2016
  • Tudor and Stuart ideas about sanitation were far different from ours. In city streets the dung of animal ...ther method to destroy house bugs: "Take gunpowder beat small and lay some about the crevices of your bedstead, and fire it with a match..., and keep the sm
    12 KB (1,889 words) - 15:15, 6 July 2015
  • : '''Benedict''' from [[Much Ado About Nothing|''Much Ado About Nothing'']] : '''Beatrice''' from ''Much Ado About Nothing''
    19 KB (3,245 words) - 13:32, 9 July 2015
  • ...conversation, “Creating Nature” will provide insights into premodern ideas about human entanglement with the nature they knew themselves to be creating and
    6 KB (726 words) - 09:17, 21 May 2019
  • ...en widely on manuscripts in early modern England and is currently thinking about hybrid books, early modern writing paper, and filing systems. She has edite ...souls have diverged in an open-ended range of religious and secular views about what human beings are. The early modern period lies at the heart of these p
    25 KB (3,602 words) - 15:49, 27 March 2019
  • ...c political activity and textual production; Protestant satirical writings about nuns and nunneries; translations of medieval texts for early modern women r ...ed widely on manuscripts in early modern England and is currently thinking about hybrid books, early modern writing paper, and filing systems. She is also P
    20 KB (2,858 words) - 10:01, 27 March 2019
  • ...]''' (College of William and Mary) on “Travel, Tutors, and Texts: Learning about Europe in England and Abroad”
    5 KB (664 words) - 11:43, 15 October 2015
  • ...azia Sikander''' (author of recent New York Times article “What We Believe About Culture”) with interlocutor '''Kishwar Rizvi''' (Islamic Art and Architec :What is “early modern” about the region we now call the American South? Historically, we point to the ri
    24 KB (3,386 words) - 15:58, 10 April 2023
  • ...sizes (often known as "Imperial standard" size), the same way we now talk about "A4 paper" or "letter size paper". Then, beginning in the 19th century, the
    5 KB (671 words) - 09:47, 13 April 2023
  • ...refer to the [[Single issues and offprints]] page for detailed information about the disposition of these items. As a rule of thumb, we only catalog these i ...s as much as possible. Handle them as rare materials, including provisions about not leaving them unattended (exception: Shakespeare Collection materials th
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  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Henry V (disambiguation)]].''
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  • ''Between God and Darwin: Early Modern Transitions in Understandings about Climate''
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  • ...ed; and the differences between telling the lives of those who speak truth about reality and those whose cultural products are recognized as works of the im ...ntal Life'' (1985, with Simon Schaffer). He is currently working on a book about the ideas of scientific knowledge and personal virtue in late modernity.
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  • ...vidence for the ways in which Shakespeare himself was using drama to think about questions of periodization, as well as creating the idea of a medieval past ...age marriage scenes, especially those in ''As You Like It'' and ''Much Ado About Nothing''.
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  • ...ck, University of London, has written about death and burial in London and about the sources on which estimates of London’s population are based. Forthcom ...ntments over the longue durée. The presenters will encourage conversation about the evolution of public health, social history of death, and gender dynamic
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  • ...ears after its publication, heavily influenced early modern European ideas about what witches looked like and how they should be punished. ''Malleus Malefic ...aissance-era proponents of Neo-Platonism, which blended the Platonic ideas about objective truth and forms with a hearty dose of mysticism and astrology. De
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  • ...ular, and allow a wide variety of poems to unfold in relation to questions about the nature, status, function, and aesthetic struggles of English poetry. ...e themes of gender, epistemology, the meaning of health and illness, ideas about agency and passivity, emotional self-fashioning, and the individual’s rel
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  • ...d three different teams in trying, unsuccessfully, to solve it. "In a show about Renaissance codes and ciphers, with William Friedman, the Voynich Manuscrip ...limited ''Shakespeare Unlimited''] series, talks with curator Bill Sherman about codes and ciphers from the renaissance to today.
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  • ...re also welcome. A set of common readings that reflect current scholarship about music will focus discussion. A technical background in music is not require ...ts faculty participants, the seminar will engage in two days of discussion about the principles of unity and diversity of the human and natural world as per
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  • ...ated to the spatial turn in “London studies.” They were able to learn more about where this topic currently stands and what discoveries will push the field
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  • ...al nerve-center of English law. There are, therefore, intriguing questions about the place of the inns as distinctive legal and educational societies within :From about 1400, many European artisans and practitioners began to write down their wo
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  • ...tfordian has added circles, arrows, rebuttals, and remarks all over a book about Shakespeare)
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  • :How does thinking about conjugality—espousals, marriage, sexuality, polygamy, concubinage, reprod ...losophy, physical performance, and liberal education have much to teach us about what the arts and humanities have to offer to education today. The seminar
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  • ...anley]]. "'What is stylistics and why are they saying such terrible things about it?" In ''The Stylistics Reader''. Ed. J. J. Weber. London: Arnold, 1996. 9
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  • ...What kind of drama is the ''Second Shepherds’ Play''? What does it suggest about the nature of medieval religious drama, including its role in medieval soci ...ions influence perceptions of gender? How did dance contribute to thinking about male and female bodies? Seminar participants will also consider the ways in
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  • ...ssional staff and fellows in residence, archival exercises, and discussion about wider applications outside the early modern period.  ...and interested in applying for the program, you can find more information about the application guidelines and process on the Center for Humanistic Inquiry
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  • ...llection|ǂb Sublocation or collection]] section of the Folgerpedia article about MARC 852 Location for a list of the most common ones)
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  • MARC field 506 in the bibliographic and holdings formats contains information about restrictions imposed on access to the described materials. This field is re
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  • ...ned for faculty members and advanced graduate students working on projects about the theory and practice of early modern translation, and most sessions will ...They will also examine the visual culture of this Atlantic space for clues about changing conceptions of the natural world. The expedition will encompass An
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  • ...s for ease of use. However, EMMO also gives users the opportunity to learn about paleography and make their own transcriptions. ...y modern period—engage with the manuscripts directly, intriguing questions about and investigations into language, history, and culture are emerging. Softwa
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  • ...rences, commentary on contemporary religious developments, and reflections about the life of William Shakespeare, among other topics. ...neral conduct to a right understanding in the great combustions and broils about religion here in England'' (1661).
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  • ...peare Library are extensive materials relating to David Garrick, numbering about 50,000 items, which make him the second most dominating figure, after Shake ...g Drury Lane Theatre was a major enterprise, involving in any given season about 140 performers and house personnel. He was largely responsible for arrangin
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  • ...distinguished scholar-in-residence. Leeds directed and contributed to just about every kind of program the Institute offered. From NEH Institutes to Birthda
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  • ...ty and textual production; Protestant satirical <nowiki> </nowiki>writings about nuns and nunneries; translations of medieval texts for early modern women ...cripts in early modern England and is currently <nowiki> </nowiki>thinking about hybrid books, early modern writing paper, and filing systems. She is also
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  • ...September 6, 2008. The exhibition was curated by Jeffrey Forgeng of the [[#About the Higgins|Higgins Amory Museum]] with assistance from Bettina Smith of th .... Norfolk accepts, and the king sets a date for the encounter. The duel is about to begin when Richard throws down his baton of office on the field of comba
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  • ...ading’) provide good introductions to specific fields you may need to know about. Some of the later anthologies suffer from the twin evils of much DH debate ..., depending on their familiarity with the resource. They should make notes about aspects of EEBO they find unusual or surprising, and prepare to discuss how
    24 KB (3,309 words) - 10:35, 14 September 2016
  • ...o! Shakespeare's American Tour Exhibition Material | Click here]] to learn about the First Folio that visited New Mexico.
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  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Henry IV, Part 1 (disambiguation)
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  • The "Details" tab records metadata about both the original publication and its electronic representation. Not every * '''Physical description:''' Includes notes about whether an item is illustrated
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  • ...ed the old. The seminar will ask how English Catholics thought and debated about church, state, and crown. How did English, Scottish, and Irish Catholics ab ...m Africa, Europe, and America raised questions in the minds of all parties about received notions of human society and history, such as the "naturalness" of
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  • :This symposium asks about the spaces and places within which political thought was conducted, circula ...hey collaboratively explore the usefulness of these paradigms for thinking about early modern literature and political theory. The seminar will begin by con
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  • ...book ever published in England devoted exclusively to plays. Before 1623, about half of Shakespeare's plays were published in quartos – small books made * Scholars think that about 750 copies of the First Folio were printed, which was a typical print run i
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  • *[[List of nonfiction resources about the Folger]]
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  • ...rine O. Acheson. Broadview, 2007. [Notable bed scenes abound; you can read about them in my essays “The Case of Lady Anne Clifford," ''PMLA'' 121.4 (Octob ...ents and I will examine literary representations of reproduction, thinking about them in relation to deep-seated ideologies of nation, culture, conflict, an
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  • ...([http://www.op.org/en/content/st-dominic Dominicans] and [https://ofm.org/about/history/ Franciscans]) and of new feminine forms of religious life (e.g., t ...nfessional manuals proliferated, which guided priests in garnering details about the frequency, duration, and intensity of a confessant's sins.</p>
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  • **Ask the project supervisor at any time about the best course of action if unsure. ** Add information about the change, e.g. "Part 2 formerly identified as Folger *old number*."
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  • about the spatial and experiential dimensions of human-made settings in which have the effect of constituting knowledge about nature? Curated by our
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  • ...will continue to be updated. This article provides resources for learning about the conflict, key people, innovations, and experiences to give context to t ...collections/slave-narratives-from-the-federal-writers-project-1936-to-1938/about-this-collection/ Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers
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  • ''This article is about Shakespeare's play. For other uses, see [[Richard III (disambiguation)]].''
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  • ...olger.edu/ catalog], click on the request button, and have the information about the item automatically filled into the request form in the researcher's req
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  • ...and come to the cultural influence of the King James Bible, and that's all about people, too—the authors, the musicians. It was a challenge to represent t ...r loans of some very early materials, too. The Anglo-Saxon manuscript from about the year 1000, the Wycliffite Bible manuscript from the 1380s—I always gr
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  • ...in an unfamiliar hand. Check out [[Practical Paleography]] for information about upcoming or continuing virtual sessions on Zoom. Last updated in summer 202 ...llion records describing archival materials, bringing together information about historical documents, personal papers, family histories, and more. With ove
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  • ...and discussions of current food issues that helped reinvigorate questions about early modern cuisine for a contemporary world. ...past as modes of contemporary consciousness raising? What can we discover about the embodied materiality of more theoretical interventions when exploring h
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  • ...historical and contemporary disciplines necessarily challenges assumptions about historical knowledge, theoretical borders, and scholarly dissemination and ...early modern Europe and its overseas colonies, long before modern debates about “two cultures,” how did an encyclopedic understanding of knowledge, new
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  • ...liographic record for the original material. This practice continued until about 2014, but have since been suppressed from searches and displays. Currently,
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  • :2. ''Ellen Terry as Beatrice [in Shakespeare’s Much ado about nothing]'' ...mi=0&trs=1 portrait], Ellen Terry is portrayed as Beatrice from ''Much Ado About Nothing''. A renowned and celebrated actor in both Britain and America, her
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  • ## For large record sets, first use MarcEdit to split file into sets of about 1,000 records each '''Don't worry about:'''
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  • ...jstor.org/shakespeare/ Understanding Shakespeare,]" leading a conversation about the use and improvement of these tools for the undergraduate classroom. ...ville Shakespeare Festival, featuring photographs, videos, and scholarship about modern directing, acting, costume design, and songwriting for ''Comedy of E
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  • ...ngress for use in authority and bibliographic records. New terms are added about once every two years.<ref>DCRM-L discussion, October 9, 2013, see https://l
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  • ..., which frequently addressed in embodied form large and ultimate questions about humanity's place in creation and the scheme of history, and did so in direc ...The York Biblical cycle plays processed annually on pageant carts into and about the city to stop at York Minster and end on the market Pavement; small trav
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  • ...o! Shakespeare's American Tour Exhibition Material | Click here]] to learn about the First Folio that visited Kentucky.
    8 KB (1,027 words) - 11:41, 28 April 2017
  • ...e here on the occasion of Shakespeare’s birthday celebrations to speculate about what gave birth to Shakespeare’s creativity with language. Thank you all This is a paper about a set of small words—words like “may," "can," "will," "should," "ought,
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  • ...which made disputes over the terms of confessional identity into disputes about loyalty and membership. The stakes of these disputes were so high for so ma ...certain continental regimes had more or less lax press laws, and to think about the possibility, desirability and necessity of using printed texts to addre
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  • :This seminar will explore and raise questions about the nature of English manuscript culture from approximately 1550 to 1650. T ...rous place in the world. This seminar, exploring English-language writings about the Caribbean, charts the complicated vision of the region from the intrusi
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  • ...olger.edu/template.cfm?cid=1876&CFID=64516334&CFTOKEN=62037413 Learn more] about the ways that you can help grow the Folger's collections by supporting us t
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  • ...iar with a wide range of foodstuffs and seasonings and had strong opinions about the flavor and quality of what they ate. The changing seasons gave them gre ...c is [http://luna.folger.edu/luna/servlet/s/x53b9t interleaved with notes] about the orchard at Tixall Hall, Staffordshire. The orchard was laid out in four
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  • ...my arguments. http://alcts.ala.org/ccdablog/?p=1092. This proposal is only about changing the way that the date of expression is "recorded" rather than whet *http://global.oup.com/about/oup_history/?AB=B&cc=us
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  • ...www.iconclass.org/ Iconclass website] to explore the system, or learn more about its features below:
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  • ...the Folger itself, making it today the largest repository of items by and about Elizabeth I in the United States. ...broidered" gown. From a Frenchman, report of "a chain of rubies and pearls about her neck," and pearl bracelets, "six or seven rows of them."
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  • ...ill propose their own scalable concept to guide where future conversations about a Global Renaissance and an environmental turn in early modern studies migh ...ng the virtual spring 2022 symposium that discussed what is “early modern” about the region we now call the American South in terms of geography, temporalit
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  • ...ed to be manufactured commercially in Germany throughout the century. From about 1765, papers of a very high quality were made in the German village of Herr ...k-printed papers using small repeated patterns and one color were produced about 1550. Since the process of printing these papers was similar to that used t
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  • ...er courts with which the English court maintained regular relations. Until about 1640 the Spanish court vied with and usually overshadowed the French one as ...manuscript cultures in order to interrogate current theoretical narratives about the period. For instance, the seminar will look in particular at the materi
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  • ...ions of lyric poems, noting evidence in the marginalia of readers skipping about the volume as they saw fit.
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  • * ''10 Things I Hate About You''. Video recording. Burbank, CA: Touchstone Home Video, 1999. Call numb * William Shakespeare. [[Much Ado About Nothing|''Much Ado About Nothing'']]. Edited by Horace Howard Furness. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 189
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  • In [https://books.google.com/books/about/The_English_icon_Elizabethan_Jacobean_po.html?id=QVcYAQAAMAAJ| ''The Englis
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  • ...nd 1700. One of the biggest changes was in population. In 1500, London had about 50,000 people. By 1700, over 500,000 people called London home!
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  • ...oetry translated from Scots Gaelic, Irish, and Welsh) will open discussion about the ways English writers represented England's conquest and unifying use of ...theatre, publishing, and performance) and for considering larger questions about the function of writing-or the dramatic text-in performance. How, for insta
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  • : Visit this map of London to find the locations of, and learn fun facts about landmark sites from early modern London—many of which are still around to
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  • ...tolph’s without Aldersgate parish, London. Stonley’s Itchington estate lay about a dozen miles east of Stratford-upon-Avon, on the far side of Charlecote, w
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  • ...c Editions],” and Dino Buzzetti and Jerome McGann’s “[http://www.tei-c.org/About/Archive_new/ETE/Preview/mcgann.xml| Electronic Textual Editing: Critical Ed
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  • ...egotiated for Mr. Folger the purchase of the Vincent Folio, felt confident about representing him in the purchase of the Titus Quarto and cabled Folger acco ...ter and intensified his fascination with Shakespeare. Reading and thinking about reading were integral to Folger's self-definition of a larger purpose in li
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  • ...DNA analysis of wood, parchment, bookworm waste, and dust may tell us more about economics and other aspects of book production and ownership ...fragments, and materials used for the boards, allowing them to learn more about their histories and creation.
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  • ...to sell well, with the second edition starting the same year, finishing in about only four years, compared to the first edition's 14. Evidently, work on the
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  • ...s of building a manuscript corpus, and encourage the participants to think about the pros and cons of various output models. ...ars better understand the fundamentals of statistical analysis by thinking about the historical development of libraries and their catalogues? Libraries org
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  • ...DNA analysis of wood, parchment, bookworm waste, and dust may tell us more about economics and other aspects of book production and ownership *Find out more about this First Folio: [http://hamnet.folger.edu/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=7912
    33 KB (5,155 words) - 11:28, 14 October 2021
  • ...a gathering of scholarship from the Folger Shakespeare Library] is a blog about Folger collections and resources written by Folger staff and readers. ...du Archive Grid] is a service provided by OCLC brings together information about archives, special collections and other collections of manuscripts and pape
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  • ...akespeare Library curator of books and manuscripts Giles E. Dawson in 1947 about the authorship question of Shakespeare. Dawson's response included a dismis
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  • Hosted by the Folger Shakespeare Library. For more information about current summer seminars, please visit the National Endowment for the Humani
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  • ...ays meant to be trusted more than the catalogue, and when making arguments about the physical make-up of early modern texts, examinations of specific exempl ...regarding the Thomason Tracts may be found [http://eebo.chadwyck.com/about/about.htm#tract here].</ref>
    33 KB (4,931 words) - 12:18, 26 May 2017
  • ''Impressions of Wenceslaus Hollar'' is about Hollar's impressions of he world in which he lived, how he saw that world,
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  • ...d Questions]] to see if your question is covered there. Want to learn more about paleography? Check out [[List of online resources for early modern English ...ncepts. Please contact Heather Wolfe for the Zoom invitation. The group is about 15 people right now and is at the intermediate level, and welcomes new part
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  • ...will look at John Adams’s, Thomas Jefferson’s, and other Founders’ writing about the Bard in the light of these questions, asking also whether or not their ...f genre, trope, and the mixing of vernacular with classical stories reveal about early modern masculinity? Besides actual representations of schoolroom scen
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  • ...en productions. However, within Scotland they were thought to have brought about a more fundamental shift in the attitude of the general population to the t ...ers and audience alike. As the appearance of the Scott adaptations brought about the rise of an identifiable genre, the Scottish National Drama, to the poin
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  • We know a lot about late sixteenth-century London thanks to John Stow's [http://luna.folger.edu ...tp://luna.folger.edu/luna/servlet/s/2s95j5 manuscript] and, in particular, about market women known as hawkers and hucksters and regrater, who bought up war
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  • ...khorn Controversy, illustrating not only the various early modern opinions about the English language but also showcasing some of the inkiest words penned i ...or phrase (a tactic later used by Shakespeare), as he does in this passage about ''maturitie'', which he has “usurpe[d]” from Latin and hopes to make �
    27 KB (4,100 words) - 16:45, 23 March 2020
  • ...elve years later. Was Augustine D'Avenant Sir William's son? If so, he was about ten years old in 1675. Why would someone forge his name? ...on reasons a printer, publisher, or author might provide false information about when, where, or by whom a book was printed. One sixteenth-century printer c
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  • Construction begins; final decisions about interior design are made. ...“what is meant by the expression ‘Air conditioning’?” After learning more about “this apparatus,” he expressed surprise “that anyone would undertake,
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  • ...magic. They adhered to specific rituals for going to bed and held beliefs about when it was or was not appropriate to sleep. ...ngredients for curing nightmares and inducing sleep, and records of dreams about or by historical figures, provide a vivid glimpse of the various ways in wh
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  • ...nd Mrs. Folger themselves were not routinely listed as former owners until about 2010, when the "Sh.Col." project (to catalog all Shakespeare titles in Hamn
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  • ...from one culture to another. It pays particular attention to the questions about space itself—how it is created, who can occupy it, how to account for the ...and exchanges with the intellectual life of India? How did British thought about India fit into a broader pattern of European encounters with the region? An
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  • ...versions of the word-toss game the goal is simply to get students curious about unfamiliar or unusual language, for now quite apart from context or meaning ...savor the sound and force of these words, and become increasingly curious about their meaning.
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  • ...ish section of ''Britannia'', then, suggests two basic if important points about Irish-English relations in this period: first, great interest by the Englis One of the exhibition features about which we are most excited is the display of Irish language materials. It i
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  • ...modern England’s development of its Caribbean colonies, asking what ideas about cultural and racial differences circulated and were created in the interact ...the sexual division of labor and the new visibility of labor in discourses about trade and the economy; changes in marriage patterns and family forms, along
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  • ...aid" is easily confused with general how-to guides to finding information about specific topics. For this sort of guide at the Folger, see [[:Research guid ...g a copy of a letter from the archbishop of Canterbury to Sir Daniel Donne about certain seats in Pluckley church, September 11, 1606, and a copy of a lette
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  • ...on—anything that is part of their lives. You’ll hear Abigail Adams writing about the Battle of Bunker Hill; Abraham Lincoln moved by Macbeth; Mark Twain cel ...ion,” wrote a patriot in 1770; while a loyalist Tory expressed uncertainty about whether to sign on to a boycott of British goods in 1774: “To sign, or no
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  • For more information, read about the transition to the online request system on the Folger's research blog,
    10 KB (1,556 words) - 10:26, 18 January 2018
  • ...process" talks as a riff on [[Folger Institute]]'s Works-in-Progress talks—about the process of selecting, purchasing, reviewing, cataloging, shelving, and ...iterature or history, so other titles come to us in weekly online lists of about 20 of 30 books for us to review.
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  • ...poured forth during the period under study. What did this literature teach about body and spirit, and what models did it offer for the godly life? Taking ge ...le attention has been paid to the language, and important questions remain about what a newly historicized engagement with the complex language of Shakespea
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  • ...hosted on the Digital Anthology’s website for free use, with documentation about their treatment.
    10 KB (1,422 words) - 10:31, 25 September 2017
  • ...a gathering of scholarship from the Folger Shakespeare Library] is a blog about Folger collections and resources written by Folger staff and readers. ...t Plays Database] is a wiki-style forum for scholars to share information about lost plays in England, 1570-1642.
    63 KB (8,900 words) - 13:16, 14 May 2024
  • This case is about change and variability in the affairs of human beings and in nature. The ...Midsummer Night's Dream|''A Midsummer Night’s Dream'']]. We also thought about what this picture would look like if it were turned into a space and that�
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  • ...s also include original watercolors signed “Geo. Webbe,” an amateur artist about whom little is known. The volumes reveal important new ways of presenting S ...tors and sets, making them personal mementos of each production. Read more about a 2013 acquisition to the Augustin Daly collection of extra-illustrated boo
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  • Fayth and truth writt round about it<br>
    7 KB (1,320 words) - 15:15, 6 January 2017
  • ...rt Lunow] removed (calf with blind decorations) appeared to have been done about 1850. Therefore the order of the plays in the last binding could not have b
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  • ...ter Booth writes to his friend and famous theater producer, William Winter about the Presidential election of 1872. Ulysses S. Grant, Commanding General at ...o Roosevelt. This set was given by me to my Mother - Sara Delano Roosevelt about 1900 - and was in her room at Hyde Park until her death in 1941, when it ca
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  • complicate prior scholarly arguments about the nature of scientific
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  • ...e compiler reveals little about himself in the manuscript, he reveals much about the mental world of ordinary Protestant Londoners in the early seventeenth
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  • ...onsultation with the original text raises a series of suggestive questions about the relationship between Protestant Englishmen and the Jewish materials the
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  • ...ume, are uniquely nineteenth-century art forms that were most popular from about 1815 to 1830. Tinseling enthusiasts bought plain or colored prints, then ad
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  • | 16 || of Shakespeare in Octagon Frame all black round opening about 8" || Folger Library copy work. Shakespeare portrait in octagonal frame || | 18 || of Shakespeare about 11x14 in box like container with 2 doors || Folger Library copy work. Shake
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  • Protestant England delighted in reading scandals about the Pope and the Catholic Church. The author of the newsbook, ''Newes from ...acerbic, and scurrilous. His willingness to experiment with editorializing about both king and Parliament ensured a less than smooth relationship with the a
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  • ...worth searching for a digitized copy; there may be additional information about the person on the title page or another prominent source not recorded by th
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  • ...oject/| ''Rose Revealed'' project], [https://digitalblackfriars.weebly.com/about.html| Digital Blackfriars], the [https://www.ausstage.edu.au/pages/browse/| ...paleography, archival research, TEI, and Solr, DEx allows us to learn more about the role of dramatic extracts in theatre history, audience reception, readi
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  • *http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki: To read the documentation about the MediaWiki platform, please feel free to consult this link.
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  • ...dome of Congo, a region of Africa: And of the countries that border rounde about the same. 1. Wherein is also shewed, that the two zones torrida & frigida, ...amnet relating to the Royal African Company, dated from the 1690's through about 1714.
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  • ..., presented by Ireland to John Byng in 1799. Also a portion of a statement about the forgeries in the autograph of Dr. Samuel Parr; a draft of a letter by S :A note in a later hand reads "Shakespearean scholar and forger letter about his 1st folio with forged emendations."
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  • ...gn. Later, Macbeth seeks out the Weird Sisters again to gain clarification about his actions. Busily stirring their cauldron, the witches recite some of Mac We can be slightly more confident about the identity of the politician depicted as Coriolanus in this print: it is
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  • If you were a boy in Shakespeare’s day, you could pay a penny—about the price of a loaf of bread—to stand and see a play, or you might even a Do you want to learn more about Shakespeare, his times, and his plays?
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  • ...wn what the critics (often the celebrated Edwin Winter) wrote in the press about the theatrical interpretation, how full the house was, how many encores the
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  • Learn more about violets and other herbs in Shakespeare's [[Hamlet|''Hamlet'']] in this [[:F Learn more about Jane Dawson's cookbook from this audio by curator Rebecca Laroche.
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  • ''This article is about past programming in Folger Institute's Center for Shakespeare Studies. For :This seminar engaged in the debate about the construction of Shakespeare(s) by attending to such contexts as writing
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  • To read the insights of the curators alongside some of the objects about which they are discussing, visit our ''First Chefs''’ curator’s insight Hannah Woolley was one of the most popular English writers to write about household management in the early modern period. She began publishing books
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  • ...oks, but she was especially interested in this volume because Selden wrote about lineage and how different titles and property pass in families through the ...rbert, 4th earl of Pembroke -- were powerful men, neither helped her bring about the settlement. After their deaths, Anne continued to pursue her interests
    52 KB (8,490 words) - 20:13, 23 March 2016
  • ...e who worked on the translation exists. Inconsistent records and questions about which scholars replaced those who died have added more uncertainty over tim ...the king's approval for the King James Bible project, and he cared deeply about the translation. Rainolds, however, did not live to see it completed. Worki
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  • ...tag <head> indicates a heading or title). Tags may also convey information about words in the text (i.e. the <name> tag denotes a proper name). The XML tag To learn more about XML and take a tutorial if you wish, try [https://www.w3schools.com/xml/def
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  • Accurate geographical information about China was difficult to acquire in this period, and maps reflected the confu ...epicted as a strange wonder to European readers. Reports contained stories about sailing land vehicles, trained birds that helped fisherman with their catch
    44 KB (6,775 words) - 14:33, 10 July 2015
  • ...ortance to presentation and inscribed copies, and looked to them for clues about relationships, meetings and dates. At the Folger scholars have recently dis ...ee to which men and women participated. Provenance also tells us something about reading habits, tastes, and secular interests as well as connecting us to t
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  • ''This article is about an exhibition about the historical figure Henry VIII. For other uses, see [[Henry VIII (disambi ...enry’s reign were occupied with warfare against France and Scotland, worry about a possible invasion of Europe by Muslim forces, and concern for his throne,
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  • ...en over many of the estates of dissolved monasteries, creating uncertainty about boundaries and a demand for estate surveyors and mapmakers. ...h philosopher René Descartes, helped make possible scientific propositions about unseen phenomena by such men as Athanasius Kircher whose ''Mundus Subterran
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  • ...The York Biblical cycle plays processed annually on pageant carts into and about the city to stop at York Minster and end on the market Pavement; small trav
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  • ...ling out what services they offered; and everywhere ballad singers singing about the latest scandals and news. Vendors' voices needed to be loud and forcefu If you interested in learning more about the music heard and referenced in Shakespeare's plays, here are some select
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  • ...ean in the English imagination, Englishmen and women got their imagination about the sea partly from living on an island, to be sure, but also through liter Before I go on to talk about each of these men a little bit more, I want to—well, I want to put the fi
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  • ...rs]] are only made in exceptional circumstances. Call numbers changed from about 2010 onward display in [[Hamnet]] as "Former call number" and can be search
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  • ...ional individuals, “Philomathes” and “Epistemon,” who debate what is known about witchcraft. It was published in 1597, and issued three times in London on h .... Porta, along with many practitioners writing on “magic,” was quite clear about the distinctions, and sets out at the beginning of his text to ensure that
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  • ...ng had achieved “the perfection of the art.” But Boydell was less sanguine about English painting which, still in its “infancy,” focused more on the pro ...ntings for the National Edition. The catalogue offered viewers information about the scenes depicted: play title, act and scene, characters, and most useful
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  • * [[Thinking about Poetic Genres in the Early Modern Period (seminar)]] (1999)
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  • <p>Thinking about the staging of medieval drama requires us to consider it as a living thing ...e thrust staging of Shakespeare's Globe, audience members would have moved about the place, turning and positioning themselves to best view the action on a
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  • ...magination were radically opposed. It will ask how far current assumptions about the tendency of women writers to favor the royalist cause can be borne out,
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  • ....folger.edu/luna/servlet/s/u85dn1 This opening] provides essential details about the reign and family of King Henry II of France. His arms are shown on the ...ntroversy surrounds the Shakespeare grant of arms which you can learn more about in the [[Symbols of Honor: Heraldry and Family History in Shakespeare's Eng
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  • ...th Beatrice Listening in the Garden'' ([[Much Ado About Nothing|''Much Ado About Nothing'']] III.1) || || Oil on canvas, 22 1/2 x 16 1/2 in. || Folger case
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  • ...listed titles of the books on the shelves behind Shakespeare in his notes about the painting, but it appears that he may have been interpreting light and s ...irst exhibited his work at the Royal Academy in 1852, but nothing is known about his life before then. He is mostly known for portraits and “Keepsake Beau
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  • Field 583 in the bibliographic and holdings formats contains information about processing, reference, and preservation actions. The Folger uses field 583
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  • About half of Shakespeare’s plays were printed in the smaller quarto format bef ...uk/44DUR_VU1:44DUR_LMS_DS.b16977968 Cosin W.2.11 (=S.R.Safe)]). Learn more about this copy in [http://www.2daymedia.com/ASPProcessURL/partner-nonav-preview.
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  • ...Witmore says. "I hope that the people who visit the exhibition think aloud about how the things came together and take away a deeper appreciation for just h
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  • The C-high/C-low and D-high/D-low designations came about during spring 2024. We had initially planned on sizes C and D, but found we ...s receive sequential call numbers based on format. The collection includes about a dozen media formats, which are numbered separately. See the [[Bard2:Digit
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  • ...ile negative stereotypes of Africans abounded, there was intense curiosity about the continent and its people. The word "race" itself had a variety of diffe ...ciple of toleration. The Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell attempted to bring about toleration for many persecuted Protestant sects. He also granted toleration
    34 KB (5,178 words) - 13:54, 8 July 2015
  • ...blicly. The Quaker Margaret Fell defended women’s right to speak in public about religious matters. Georgette de Montenay expressed her Protestant beliefs b == Continental Women Writing About Love (case 5)==
    80 KB (12,325 words) - 13:44, 2 March 2016
  • ...blicly. The Quaker Margaret Fell defended women’s right to speak in public about religious matters. Georgette de Montenay expressed her Protestant beliefs b == Continental Women Writing About Love (case 5) ==
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  • ...rly than ever before, thereby challenging some longstanding preconceptions about colonial-era theatre. Alongside the obvious advantages of having this infor ...tential as a means of tracking trends and changes in early modern comedies about inheritance. I will consider the role of kinship ties, wit, exchange, and n
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  • ...cookbook—the first cookbook to be published by a practicing chef—includes about one thousand Renaissance recipes, as well as menus and instructions for eve
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  • :15. Much Ado About Nothing
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  • ...he platform with him. Pamphlets such as this one helped to inform citizens about what he had said, but also provided a way for both Parliamentarians and roy
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  • ...n property, slavery, and colonization? What debates were then taking place about the pursuit of empire through wars of expansion?
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  • ...coast of New England, with the charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and about a thousand settlers on board. Ten of them had formal legal training at the ...erty law and how to draft writs and pleadings. After three years or so, at about 21, those who aspired to higher professional status—and could afford it�
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  • ...l to the development of the cataloging standard [http://www.rdatoolkit.org/about RDA]. Using [[Controlled vocabularies|established terms]] to specify those * Use "depicted" for works about other works when appropriate (for instance, a press kit for "My own private
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  • ...Lincoln from 1660 until his death in 1663.</ref> to ask my Brothers advise about Hebrews:<ref>The topical similarities between ''De Iuramento'' and the bibl
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  • ...catalog records describe what an item ''is'' (or contains), not what it is about. ''Genre'' corresponds roughly to the intellectual content of what is being ...uivalent terms when sharing data. But as the saying goes, "the great thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from."
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  • ...esting for the perspective they provide on how the everyday person learned about current events and how the printed word was used to disseminate and control
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  • Take 9 or 12 chickens about 3 wee<br />
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  • This article is about cataloging legal documents emanating from, or principally recording the act
    19 KB (2,790 words) - 11:12, 11 October 2019
  • ...records from the Shakespeare Collection project use 852$p for information about volumes held. This information will be moved to 866 instead.
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  • * Mary Jo Tydlacka. Chesapeake Shakespeare Company’s ''Much Ado About Nothing'' at the Patapsco Female Institute. Promotional poster. Drawing: wa
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  • *''Women On Stage: A Conversation about Susanna Centlivre'', February 5, 2012
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  • ...ad in pursuit of justice, the godly in search of salvation. Consumers read about new products. For women, studying worthy books might attract or repel suito
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  • ...War: Tracy K. Smith and Maurice Manning (2021)|''I Will Tell You the Truth About This: Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War: Tracy K. Smith and Maurice Manning
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  • '''About ARTFL:''' “Founded in 1982 as a result of a collaboration between the Fre ...ces:''' Monetary resources are not readily known, but a good deal is known about the software behind these projects:
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  • ...l and agricultural history, and the cultural history of early modern ideas about religion, women, and sexuality.
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  • ...from its 18th-century beginnings, is as much about relics and souvenirs as about books and plays. ...that readers imagine them to have been'''. The fact that we know so little about their lives or what they looked like has meant that readers have felt the n
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  • ...rs that $3 isn't indexed. EB 20161101* Added 509 so additional information about ESTC records is visible in Hamnet (as it is in ESTC) EB 20170105
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  • ...ey of London'', which provides the one indispensible source of information about London at the turn of the seventeenth century. His ''Survey'' is organized ...ssolution, Thomas Norton responded to a request for first-hand information about Henry VIII’s intentions in closing the monasteries. His correspondent was
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  • Without this humble manuscript, we would know little about the once flourishing genre of English morality plays. The last page of ''Th
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  • You can learn more about [[About_our_recipe_books|how this resource was created, how to use it, and
    42 KB (5,831 words) - 17:34, 20 February 2024
  • ..., Service, Rewards, Friends, Books, Death.” By that standard, we know much about Shakespeare, although never as much as we might wish. The materials in this ...cholars, however, think it is actually an alternative title for ''Much Ado About Nothing''. This fragment was discovered by a London bookseller in 1953. It
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  • ...hn Stow, who wrote a celebrated Survey of London, piling up amazing detail about the capital’s buildings and history; William Camden, who had particular i
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  • * LOAN courtesy of the [https://www.nsa.gov/about/cryptologic_heritage/museum/virtual_tour/museum_tour_text.shtml#big_machine ..." and a full century after it resurfaced we still know surprisingly little about it. The cracking of the Voynich Code—if that is what it is—has long bee
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  • ...o double on various instruments. Apparently, Mexican bishops had no qualms about the use of harps, viols, shawms, trombones, and other instruments in church
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  • ...it became possible to see phases of usage affecting the choices being made about the pieces by theatre managers.”<ref>Bell, pp. 7-8</ref>
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  • ...The raigne of King Edvvard the third: as it hath bin sundrie times plaied about the citie of London.'' 1596. STC 7501, 89 images. ([http://hamnet.folger.ed ...The raigne of King Edvvard the Third. As it hath bene sundry times played about the citie of London.'' 1599. STC 7502 copy 1, 53 images. ([http://hamnet.fo
    76 KB (11,280 words) - 11:14, 12 February 2018
  • ...de of the “three Rs,” and what means might be used to retrieve information about early modern women and their various educations.
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  • ...His sense of humor still comes across in his letters, and he took ribbing about his modest height in stride. Plagued by ill-health much of the time, he nev ...admiration for Garrick’s fiancee Eva Maria, but also their love for gossip about Garrick:
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  • ...lated to a web presence that directly mimics the CD-ROM (including a note 'about this disc').</blockquote>
    29 KB (3,859 words) - 11:07, 2 December 2016
  • ...ent yt e child lay as stretched out in ye aprehension of all those yt were about it past hopes of Recovery but ye parents being perswaded by one yt had expe
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  • ...ciety-and-culture-seventeenth-century-england Cambridge University Press], about the emergence of a consumer society in seventeenth-century England.
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  • * [[I Will Tell You the Truth About This: Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War: Tracy K. Smith and Maurice Manning
    22 KB (2,037 words) - 12:17, 28 June 2021
  • ...ses based on actual portraits. The caption repeats the well-known anecdote about Hogarth’s difficulties in painting Garrick: “While Garrick sat for Hoga ...e both complex coded responses to performances, reflecting current notions about acting and portrait conventions, and commercial commodities that served a v
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  • ...eformation in Germany, because it began conversations and raised questions about the teachings and traditions of the Catholic Church.
    24 KB (3,707 words) - 11:43, 28 February 2019
  • ...of items) received between July 1, 2015 and June 30, 2016. For information about how these acquisitions fit within the collection, see the Folger's [[Collec ...nes levied upon men and women, many of them for transgressions of the laws about selling of ale,||||uuuu||2015-10-09||http://hamnet.folger.edu/cgi-bin/Pwebr
    77 KB (10,911 words) - 09:27, 11 April 2017
  • ...of items) received between July 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017. For information about how these acquisitions fit within the collection, see the Folger's [[Collec | Book || Akerley, Kathleen, || FEAR: a comedy? about performing Shakespeare. || Washington, D.C., 2016. || 2016 || 10/20/2016 ||
    124 KB (16,083 words) - 22:53, 8 January 2018
  • ...of items) received between July 1, 2017 and June 30, 2018. For information about how these acquisitions fit within the collection, see the Folger's [[Collec | Manuscript || || Two manuscripts bound together about Jacobean tax law concerning the legality of taxation without parliamentary
    65 KB (8,606 words) - 20:18, 8 June 2021
  • == Much Ado About Nothing ==
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  • ...ional reflections upon several subjects. : Whereto is premis’d a discourse about such kind of thoughts''. <br/>
    31 KB (4,750 words) - 13:43, 15 February 2022
  • ...begins online cataloging of its full manuscript collection, consisting of about 56,000 manuscripts.
    33 KB (4,836 words) - 08:28, 8 July 2016
  • ...of items) received between July 1, 2018 and June 30, 2019. For information about how these acquisitions fit within the collection, see the Folger's [[Collec
    41 KB (5,388 words) - 20:17, 8 June 2021
  • : Data describing other data. Metadata provide information about one or more aspects of data, such as type, date, creator, location, and so
    45 KB (6,471 words) - 12:59, 27 August 2019
  • ...libet to euery quodlibet, decides an hundred crosse interrogatorie doubts, about the generall contentions betwixt the seminarie priests and Iesuits at this ...''; "ex libris Brent Gration-Maxfield, 1960", with his manuscript notation about the work
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  • ...oine Duke of Lorraine; worked in Lyon with Rabelais, who wrote satirically about him in ''La vie de Gargantua et de Pantagruel'' ...y (c. 1508 - 1572), third Earl; Henry Stanley (1531 - 1572) , fourth Earl, about whom the ''DNB'' says that he invited "actors, poets, heralds, and wrestler
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  • ...ry. Today directors collaborate in every aspect of a production, and since about the 1950s have increasingly brought the elements of costume, lighting, set,
    58 KB (9,010 words) - 13:29, 14 July 2015
  • ...ick is not meant to be comprehensive but to provide a variety of resources about the life and times of David Garrick. The list includes Electronic Resources
    63 KB (8,344 words) - 11:06, 2 December 2016
  • ...two unnamed apprentices in 1633. His son Robert apprenticed with him from about 1639, completing that apprenticeship in 1646. <br> '''Biographical notes:''' Bentham came to London in or about 1595 and received a patent of denization in May, 1607. He was perhaps firs
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  • cistus -i = genus of flowering plants in the rock rose family with about 20 species; JW mentions (V.a.291, 67r) ''C. anglicanus'', not a currently r clematis -idis daphnoides = a genus of about 380 species in the ''Ranunculaceae'' family (buttercups); ''C. daphnoides'
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  • ...of items) received between July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2020. For information about how these acquisitions fit within the collection, see the Folger's [[Collec
    59 KB (7,894 words) - 20:22, 8 June 2021
  • | Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. ''Much adoe about nothing. '' London : printed by V<nowiki>[</nowiki>alentine<nowiki>]</nowik
    149 KB (20,102 words) - 16:24, 17 April 2024
  • | Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. ''Much adoe about nothing. '' London : printed by V<nowiki>[</nowiki>alentine<nowiki>]</nowik
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  • | One hundred books about bookmaking ; a guide to the study and appreciation of printing. || Lehmann- ..., 1998. || Z 105 B 76 1998 || https://books.google.com/books/about/The_British_Library_Guide_to_Writing_and.html?id=MFvmAAclchcC || https://ha
    430 KB (53,158 words) - 10:16, 21 January 2022
  • ...s-blog.lib.cam.ac.uk/?p=16492 Blog post] from Cambridge University Library about eight of their Gwynn holdings, published in 2018. .... Dom. 1626. Listed in Maggs Bros. catalog [https://books.google.com/books/about/Bookbinding_in_the_British_Isles.html?id=WDqjfsRY4r4C Bookbinding in the Br
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