Data Life Cycle Event(s) Type: Exhibition Label: John Milton and the Cultures of Print: An Exhibition of Books, Manuscripts, and Other Artifacts Date: 2011-02-03 Detail: February 3 through May 31, 2011. Special Collections and University Archives Gallery, Lower Level, Archibald Stevens Alexander Library. Curator: Fernanda Perrone (Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries)
Curator: Thomas Fulton (Department of English, Rutgers University)
Funder: New Jersey Council for the Humanities Name: John Milton and the Cultures of Print: An Exhibition of Books, Manuscripts, and Other Artifacts
Additional Detail(s)
Type: Exhibition catalog
Name: John Milton and the Cultures of Print: An Exhibition of Books, Manuscripts, and Other Artifacts
Detail: Published by Rutgers University Libraries in conjunction with the exhibition opening.
Additional Detail(s)
Type: Exhibition caption
Name: Sham Prophecy
Detail: The Sham Prophecy, anonymous Restoration Satire
Once though to be by John Wilmot, the Second Earl of Rochester, this "Sham Prophecy" exists in different versions and formats; it was even reportedly inscribed in the walls of an abbey. Dated "23 May 1297" in at least one version, the prophecy tells of a time in 1678 when the man call'd Oates shall bee in danger to bee devoured." Titus Oates was the infamous architect of the fictitious conspiracy known as the "Popish Plot" that ignited anti-Catholic paranoia in 1678-1681.
Additional Detail(s)
Type: Exhibition section
Name: III. The Scribal Publication of Verse
Detail: THE SCRIBAL PUBLICATION OF VERSE: The scribal “publication” of these poems was probably as effective as print, since even now over 4,000 extant manuscript texts attest to an extraordinary rate of production. Survival rates vary in puzzling ways: in spite of the value they must have had even then, the survival rate of poems in Donne’s own hand is extraordinarily low: only one survives, and it was discovered n 1970. Scribal circulation was the central mode of publication for poets like Donne, Thomas Traherne, Andrew Marvell, or Katherine Phillips, most of whose poetry was not printed until after their deaths.
CollectionRutgers University Libraries Special Collections General Resources
Organization NameSpecial Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries, Rutgers University. Libraries. Special Collections
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