Exhibit: Landmarks: Maps as Literary Illustration

Date and Time

January 16 - April 14, 2018
All day

Location

Houghton Library, Edison and Newman Room

Landmarks: Maps as Literary Illustration
Houghton Library, Edison and Newman Room
Jan 16 – April 14, 2018

Full:
Maps enjoy a long tradition as a mode of literary illustration, orienting readers to worlds real and imagined.  Presented in conjunction with the bicentenary of the Harvard Map Collection, this exhibition brings together over sixty landmark literary maps, from the 200-mile-wide island in Thomas More’s Utopia to the supercontinent called the Stillness in N. K. Jemisin’s 'The Fifth Season'. Visitors will traverse literary geographies from William Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County to Nuruddin Farah’s besieged Somalia; or perhaps escape the world’s bothers in Pooh’s Hundred Acre Wood.   At this intersection of literature and cartography, get your bearings and let these maps guide your way.

Brief:
Discover over sixty landmark literary maps that have oriented readers for centuries, bringing to life imagined places from Thomas More’s Utopian island to the Stillness supercontinent in N. K. Jemisin’s award-winning science fantasy 'The Fifth Season'.

 

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Landmarks: Maps as Literary Illustration

Curatorial Talks

Discover over sixty landmark literary maps that have oriented readers for centuries, bringing to life imagined places from Thomas More’s Utopian island to the Stillness supercontinent in N. K. Jemisin’s award-winning science fantasy The Fifth Season.

 

Join exhibition curator Peter X. Accardo, Houghton Library, and David Weimer, Librarian for Cartographic Collections and Learning at the Harvard Map Collection, for lunchtime and evening tours of the exhibition.

 

Houghton Library, Edison and Newman Room

Wednesday, February 14, 12:30-1:15pm

Thursday, March 8, 5:30-6:15pm

Thursday, March 22, 5:30-6:15pm

Wednesday, March 28, 12:30-1:15pm