About Melissa Watterworth Batt

Archivist for Literary Manuscripts, Natural History Collections and Rare Books Collections, Archives and Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries

Dispatches from a Hotter Planet and a Cooler Cosmos: Seth Borenstein at UConn Thursday

Seth Borenstein, a science and environmental journalist for more than 20 years, covers science nationally and internationally for the New York headquarters of the Associated Press.  He was a member of the Associated Press team that won the 2010 George Polk Award for Environment Reporting for their coverage of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

On Thursday, February 26, 4:00pm  in Konover Auditorium at the Dodd Research Center, Borenstein will present “Dispatches from a Hotter Planet and a Cooler Cosmos” for the Edwin Way Teale Lecture Series co-sponsored by University Libraries, Human Rights Institute, Center for Conservation and Diversity, Graduate School, and several University departments including Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Economics, and Political Science.

The Edwin Way Teale Lecture Series is designed to bring a variety of distinguished speakers to the University to speak on various aspects of nature and the environment.

All lectures are free and open to the public.

Archives in Action: Kuo Hsi Masterpiece on View

earlyspring1Early Spring, a masterpiece painted by Kuo Hsi in the year 1072, stands as a lasting testament to the infinite beauty of pressure and ink on silk.  The scroll painting, originally painted as two, depicts a mist and tree-covered mountain and is produced in a style that Kuo Hsi developed after studying the work of Chinese master Li Ch’eng.  Kuo Hsi held a high position in the Imperial Painting Academy and wrote a treatise on landscape painting.  Through the diligent work of his son, Kuo Ssu, Kuo Hsi’s work was consolidated into a family collection which, though seldom seen by individuals outside the family, was preserved and treasured.

As Chiang Chao-shen notes in an introduction to the scroll,earlyspring2

The silhouette of the rocks and boulders is delineated with a heavy touch, the fog-washed trees with a light one.  The washes work in harmony to express a complete idea of nature’s forms under these seasonal conditions – with the treetops disappearing imperceptively into the vapor, their trunks still vigorously etched in darker ink.

The original scroll is housed in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, Republic of China.  The fine art facsimile held at the Dodd Research Center, made by Nigensha Publishing earlyspring3Company of Japan, was on view for students in Dr. Yan Geng’s East Asian Painting class on Wednesday, February 18.  It will be unrolled again on Monday, February 23, 2015. The piece was acquired specifically for use in the classroom.

Archives in Action highlights how archives are being used today. Series author Lauren Silverio is an English and Psychology major and student employee in Archives and Special Collections.

Man, Woman, Machine: Gender, Automation, and Created Beings

We welcome intern Giorgina Paiella, an undergraduate student majoring in English and minoring in philosophy and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies. In her new blog series, “Man, Woman, Machine: Gender, Automation, and Created Beings,” she will explore treatments of created and automated beings in archival materials from Archives and Special Collections.

We love stories of animation. Over the centuries, humanity has certainly not tired of works that engage with creation, artificiality, and the relationship between animator and animated. It’s in our myths, our movies, our television shows, and our literature—from children’s narratives to infamous novels. As a writing intern in Archives and Special Collections at the Dodd Research Center this semester, I plan to examine technology magazines, the children’s literature collection, alternative press giorgina2publications, and other archival materials that explore the rise of automation and various iterations of automata and reflect upon how these representations can inform inquiries about gender, humanity, personhood, and our increasingly intimate relationship with technology.

For my first post in this blog series, I’m going to explore the trend of incorporating issues of gender into a discussion of scientific discoveries, which I have identified in several early technology publications. I read the second issue of the science and science fiction magazine Omni, a publication that founder Kathy Keeton created in 1978 with the intention of exploring “all realms of science and the paranormal, that delved into all corners of the unknown and projected some of those discoveries into fiction.” As I searched for themes that would be relevant to my research objectives, I was fascinated by the frequency at which language relating to second-wave feminism contributes to the dialogue about scientific and technological discoveries.

This is not entirely surprising, especially considering that the issue was published in November 1978, an era of burgeoning feminist activity. Some of these references were more explicitly linked to women’s issues than others. One article describes the computer revolution as “computer lib,” a clear nod to the women’s liberation movement, commonly referred to as “women’s lib.” A short news headline details the development of a birth control pill for dogs, so “fido can have sex without fear.” The description that follows reads like a parody of the female birth control pill introduced in the 1960s: “this planned parenthood for pups is dispensed by veterinarians for about five cents a day and is claimed to be 90 percent effective in stopping estrus (heat) in bitches of all sizes and descriptions.”

Another article within this issue of Omni discusses papers and novels that speculate on the scientific and cultural possibilities of a longevity pill, including Jib Fowles’s “The Impending Society of Immorals” and Albert Rosenfeld’s Prolongevity, which cites over 500 scientific papers in its bibliography. The article also describes an assignment given to thirty-one students at the University of Houston in the department of future studies to predict how a longevity pill would alter society. Their collective prediction utilizes the same alarmist dystopian rhetoric adopted by opponents of the birth control pill:

One year after the introduction of the antiaging pill, traditional religions warn against death control a campaign similar to the earlier crusade against birth control; the economy is destabilizing as employees desert their jobs; government has moved in to monopolize distribution of the pill; and the divorce rate is increasing. Ten years later, organized religion is disgraced and disbanded, virtually everyone is taking the pill, divorce rates soar, the economy is staggering because of an increase in absenteeism, and all dangerous sports are phasing out as people everywhere reorient themselves to the quest for physical immortality.

The concept of life extension is, in fact, a centuries-old trope, but this article demonstrates the way in which existing gender debates became interwoven into discussions about technological advances. Continuing on the topic of longevity technology, the author explains that “until now it was necessary for post-menopausal humans to die and get their bodies off the scene to make room for the new arrivals.” giorgina3Of course, we’re not simply talking about post-menopausal humans, but rather post-menopausal women. The objectification of women’s bodies is also far from a new phenomenon, but notice the language: they must “die and get their bodies off the scene” to make way for “new arrivals.

The rise of mechanization and speculations on new technological possibilities amplified ideas regarding the mind/body dualism and the disposability of bodies—particularly female bodies. Another article, “The Changing Shape of Women,” recounts findings from a study conducted by Berlei, the leading manufacturer of women’s undergarments in England at the time. The company describes changing trends in female body measurements, with a sample of over 4000 British and American women revealing taller frames on average, smaller breasts and hips, and thicker waists, more generally described as a “straightening of their curves.” Berlei cites poor eating habits and hormonal abnormalities from food additives as potential giorgina4explanations, but whatever the cause, “the traditional hourglass shape is no longer symbolic of today’s women.” When tasked with describing their average customer, the company states, “something rather like a thick-ended broomhandle…one might even say they’re becoming man-shaped.”

So what does this have to do with created beings like automata, cyborgs, and robots? Existing cultural views often inform the characteristics and treatment of these beings, and attitudes toward embodied human females can therefore provide insights into female technological portrayals, and vice versa. For example, a female automaton can reveal something that would perhaps not be readily apparent about the expected appearance, behavior, and roles of human women. Similarly, the body of a female cyborg can call attention to attitudes regarding female bodies and their biological processes. I aim to keep these blurred boundaries between man and machine—or perhaps more accurately, woman and machine—in mind as I continue to work through the archives.

– Giorgina Paiella

Account Books and the stories they tell

lmwdbk_136.137-220x279Rich with information, account books can reveal nuanced social and economic relationships in American communities of the 18th and early 19th centuries.  Today scholars and students use accounts books to track the economic development and behavior of individuals and families and to expose the wider network of exchange of which they were a part. Once transcribed and analyzed, layers of information recorded in account books can help to answer historical questions regarding changes in standard of living, distribution of wealth, and the role of “the poor” in local, regional, and global communities, according to Kathryn Tomasek, Professor of History at Wheaton College.

Join us on Thursday, February 12, 12:30-1:30pm in the Scholars’ Collaborative, Homer Babbidge Library, Level 4 for a talk by Kathryn Tomasek, Director of the Wheaton College Digital History Project, a teaching project in which students transcribe and markup primary sources from previously hidden archival collections. History students in Tomasek’s courses have been transcribing and marking up the day book of Laban Morey Wheaton, a member of the family that founded Wheaton Female Seminary in the 1830s. In this talk, Tomasek discusses both the teaching assignments and the research that has emerged from them.  Details about this talk and others in the series can be found at Conversations in Digital Scholarship.

Archives in Action: Little Magazines and Artists Books

Archives in Action highlights how archives are being used today. Series author Lauren Silverio is an English and Psychology major and student employee in Archives and Special Collections.  

littlemags01The archives buzzed with excitement last night as Archivist Melissa Watterworth Batt led a short class on little magazines and artists books for the students who are editing and designing the 2015 issue of UConn’s literary and arts journal, the Long River Review.

The visit began with a short tour of the stacks and an overview of the archives. Students scanned the littlemags06leather- and paper-bound spines lining the shelves on the main floor as Melissa described the wide variety of materials that are housed and preserved in the archives –
books, journals, newspapers, photographs, art, ephemera – and exchanged smiles when they learned that even the UConn Basketball trophies are held in the university’s archives.  Though the students shivered in the climate-controlled stacks, they were attentive and eager to begin looking at the material that Melissa had assembled from the collection.

Melissa set up the tables in the reading room so the material was organized roughly by time period and technique.  Literary magazines from as early as 1912, comics and graphic magazines, and magazines on cassette were set up along the outside of the reading room.

littlemags03littlemags02

Examples of work from the low-budget “Mimeograph Revolution” of the 1960’s and 1970’s were grouped together next to a table of the more typical magazines of the same time.

littlemags04Another table was dedicated to the 1980’s, a time when computer printing and colored print was becoming more popular.

Still other tables held examples of beautiful, one-of-a-kind art magazines with unique methods of printing and assembling the work. These pieces challenge traditional assumptions of what it means to imagine and produce a book or magazine.

Students circulated around the tables for about an hour, pouring over the material and taking notes on their favorite pieces, design inspirations, and manifestos. Melissa guided the students through what they were looking at and was able to answer questions that arose about the time period in which a certain journal was created, the processed used in the production, the historical significance of the magazine, and more. littlemags07littlemags08

The visit to the Dodd Research Center provided the students with the opportunity to see, hold, and read some of the earliest issues of influential magazines, such as bleb and The Paris Review, as well as the opportunity to learn about publications that never quite made it to the mainstream, such as Black Box and Ker-bloom!.  As a student and the Editor-in-Chief of the 2015 Long River Review, I can speak honestly about the importance of exposure to past literary and art magazine and the boundless inspiration that comes from holding old issues in your hand.

littlemags10My classmates and I are grateful that the Dodd Research Center is able to house so many incredible pieces of literary history and grateful that we have been allowed to explore them so personally.   I am eager to see where our new thoughts take the LRR.

 

Larry Eigner letters published in Poetry Magazine

Eigner_12-46-55Six letters by poet Larry Eigner from 1954 to 1964 are published for the first time in the December 2014 issue of Poetry Magazine, including a letter from Larry Eigner to Charles Olson dated October 20, 1956.  The letter, from the Charles Olson Research Collection housed here in Archives and Special Collections, was selected for Poetry Magazine by co-editors Jennifer Bartlett and George Hart.

Jennifer Bartlett, a poet who is currently writing a biography of Larry Eigner, was awarded a travel fellowship by the Archives to use the Larry Eigner Papers.   Her work reflects a fresh and growing attention on the life and poetry of Larry Eigner that has emerged in recent years.

Larry Eigner (1927–1996) wrote over three thousand poems on a manual Royal typewriter and was an energetic letter-writer.  He published more than 40 collections of poetry, among them From the Sustaining Air (1953), Another Time in Fragments (1967), Things Stirring / Together / or Far Away (1974), now there’s-a-morning-hulk of the sky (1981), and Waters / Places / A Time (1983).

George Hart writes in the Introduction to the letters:

Throughout the fifties, Eigner absorbed Olson’s theory of Projective Verse, and he was grouped with the Black Mountain poets in Donald Allen’s groundbreaking The New American Poetry anthology in 1960. Of the poets in this group — Olson, Creeley,Robert Duncan, and Denise Levertov (Corman chose not to be included in the anthology) — Eigner might be the one who put Olson’s theories to work most productively. Projective Verse, with its emphasis on the exchange of energy between poet and reader, and the typewriter as a means of graphing or scoring words on the space of the page, seems particularly well-suited to Eigner’s embodiment and temperament. The fact that Olson put so much stress on the stance of the poet and the poet’s breath as a form of measure, which might seem to discourage someone like Eigner who had difficulty walking and speaking, makes Eigner’s achievement even more impressive. In excerpting Eigner’s correspondence for this special feature,Jennifer Bartlett and I have chosen to focus on passages in which he writes about, or directly to, Olson regarding his poetry, poetics, and other Black Mountain poets.

 

 

Considering a degree in archival science?

mosaic-fellows-08-15-2014-craig-huey-photographyStudents and emerging professionals from traditionally underrepresented racial and ethnic minority groups interested in pursuing a masters degree in archival science are eligible for the Society of American Archivists/Association of Research Libraries Mosaic Program.  The Program provides tuition stipends, practical work experience, career placement assistance and leadership development.  The Call for Applications was announced this week.  Applications are due by February 28, 2015.

Read about the current group of Mosaic Fellows — and details about the program at ARL/SAA Mosaic Program.

Reading Room Closed December 22, 2014 to January 4, 2015

The Archives and Special Collections Reading Room in the Dodd Research Center will be closed December 22, 2014 through January 4, 2015.  The Reading Room will re-open on January 5, 2015 with regularly scheduled hours Monday through Friday, 9:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.

For more information about Reading Room hours and policies, contact the Reference Desk in Archives & Special Collections at 860.486.2524 or email us at archives@uconn.edu.

 

Farewell to Norman Bridwell, creator of Clifford the Big Red Dog | NE Children’s Lit Collection

Norman Ray Bridwell of Edgartown, who brought delight to millions of readers young and old as the author of Clifford the Big Red Dog series of books, died on Friday, December 12, at Martha’s Vineyard Hospital. He was 86. Norman Bridwell was born in Kokomo, Indiana, in 1928, according to a biography by Scholastic Books. He studied at the John Herron Art Institute in Indianapolis and Cooper Union Art School in New York before working as a commercial artist for 12 years.  Read More >

Passing of Emeritus Professor of English, and Friend, Charles Boer

Charles-BoerCharles Boer was a respected and wildly popular professor at UConn arriving in 1966 and retiring in 1992 as a full professor from the English Department, where he specialized in teaching mythology, poetry, and individual 20th-century writers from Charles Olson to Frank O’Hara, Gertrude Stein to Ernest Hemingway. He also helped establish the Charles Olson Archives, now the Charles Olson Research Collection, along with George Butterick, which are part of the University’s Archives and Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center.  Boer was also a gifted translator of ancient Greek and Latin. He was nominated for the National Book Award for his translation from ancient Greek of The Homeric Hymns in 1971, and is known for his translation from Latin of Ovid’s Metamorphoses (1989) and Marsilio Ficino’s Book of Life (1980).  His personal papers and manuscripts will be preserved in Archives and Special Collections…   Read More >

Encountering the Hand, the Ephemeral, the Unexpected in the Archive

Louis Goddard is a PhD candidate in English at University of Sussex and describes his research experience during a visit in September as recipient of a 2014 Strochlitz Travel Grant. Travel grants are awarded bi-annually to scholars to support their travel to and research in Archives and Special Collections at the University of Connecticut. 

My PhD project focuses on the prose writings of the contemporary British poet J.H. Prynne. As well as at least thirty volumes of poetry, Prynne has, over the half-century course of his career, produced a wide range of prose work, including reviews, essays, lectures and commentaries. Perhaps his most favored outlet, however, has been in correspondence. The Thomas J. Dodd Research Center holds hundreds of letters written by Prynne, the vast majority to the American poets Charles Olson and Ed Dorn, making a two-week trip to the University of Connecticut a vital part of my research as I head into the second year of the PhD.

Having read quotations from the letters in a number of existing scholarly works – notably those by my supervisor at the University of Sussex, Keston Sutherland – I thought I had a fairly good idea of what to expect from the archives: letters full of clear opinions about art and poetry, both Prynne’s and other people’s – almost crib sheets for the poems themselves, though this is an attitude that Prynne himself would certainly not endorse. Many of the letters did indeed conform to my expectations; Prynne writes to Olson, in particular, in an at times shockingly direct style, revealing his profound hopes for what, in the early- to mid-1960s, he conceived as their shared poetic project, and his equally profound disappointment when Olson began to withdraw from the correspondence as the decade progressed. prospect

Even more interesting, however, were the aspects of the letters that I hadn’t anticipated. As part of my research, I recently completed a paper on a number of ‘little magazines’ of the 1960s, looking particularly at the legacy of Gael Turnbull’s seminal Migrant (1959–60). One of the beneficiaries of this legacy was the Cambridge-based Prospect (1959–64) – no relation of the current political magazine of the same name – which Prynne edited for its much-delayed final issue in 1964. Prynne’s opening letters to Olson and Dorn are both typed on Prospect-stamped stationery, with the younger poet tentatively soliciting work to be published in the forthcoming issue. As the correspondence progresses, the reader gets a sense of the practical and financial obstacles confronting any would-be little magazine publisher in the early ’60s, and is given insight into to the decisions which led Prynne to change the format for Prospect‘s final issue, making the magazine physically larger, removing all advertisements, and ultimately giving it away for free to interested parties.

Another aspect of the letters which struck me was the frequency of comparisons between the British and North American poetry scenes at the time, and Prynne’s efforts, both poetic and practical, to bridge the Atlantic gap. Though I had visited California and Florida as a child, arriving at Storrs involved a certain amount of ‘culture-shock’ – situated near the seaside town of Brighton, Sussex barely has an on-campus supermarket, let alone a hotel, a high school and a dairy farm (though, being British, it does have the advantage of its own dedicated railway station). I can only imagine this as the reverse of what Ed Dorn must have felt when, partly as a result of Prynne’s ministrations, he was offered a teaching post at the new University of Essex in 1965, an institution whose campus was at that point only half-built.

As well as scheming to secure fellowships and teaching positions for his American correspondents, and even offering to put up visiting poets in his rooms at Gonville and Caius College in Cambridge, the young Prynne was active in promoting new American work to mainstream British publishers. Writing to Dorn in October 1963, having received an encouraging letter from Calder Publishing about Dorn’s novel The Rites of Passage, Prynne jokes about ‘the lit. agency which I seem (& am more than pleased, as you know) to be running.’ Dorn, for his part, was skeptical – as he more or less correctly predicted in a note to Olson the previous month, ‘Prynne writes from england that he sent the novel to John Calder and go [sic] back a very favorable letter. But I’m not that dumb that I don’t dig that in 3 months I’ll get a letter from him saying they almost took it.’ When further efforts were made to place the novel with André Deutsch, not only was it again rejected, but the typescript was lost in the post, setting off a chain of increasingly irate letters from Prynne to Diana Athill.

The lIMG_20140916_132022203etter from Dorn to Olson quoted above is part of a collection that I hadn’t originally planned to consult when applying to visit the Dodd Center, but which turned out to be one of the most fruitful aspects of the trip. Having spent some time mastering the two poets’ near-impenetrable handwriting, it was fascinating to switch from letters by Prynne to letters about him, revealing a certain ambivalence in both Olson’s and Dorn’s attitudes to the reception of their work in Britain. Similarly instructive were references to Donald Davie, the British poet formerly associated with ‘the Movement’ who played a crucial role in supporting Prynne’s early academic career and served as head of the Literature Department at Essex when Dorn first came to England. In one particularly opaque letter to Olson, Dorn shifts from an assessment of Davie – often referred to, tellingly, by his initials, ‘D.A.D.’ – to the following ambiguous statement: ‘I can’t but think of the English interest in our things other than interesting, and for myself unseful [sic], because I need to think there with them.’ Whether he meant to type ‘useful’ or ‘unuseful’ is difficult to determine, even in context.IMG_20140916_132127895

When reading correspondence fifty or more years down the line, short notes and other apparent ephemera often turn out to be more interesting than long, deliberate letters. This was certainly the case with the letters from Helene Dorn (née Buck), Ed Dorn’s first wife. In her letters to Olson, I came across a pressed rose picked not far from where I grew up in East Anglia, carried across the Atlantic, then posted to Olson’s house at 28 Fort Square, Gloucester, MA. Dorn’s two-way correspondence with Valarie Raworth, meanwhile, could have served as the basis for an entire PhD thesis on the unenviable position of ‘poet’s wife’ in a ’60s artistic scene no less patriarchal for its avant-garde credentials. Dorn often writes to Raworth with a real weariness about her day-to-day tasks, typing up her husband’s work from near-illegible manuscripts while simultaneously looking after the children and keeping their house in Pocatello, Idaho.

During my time in Storrs, I was lucky enough to stay at the Altnaveigh Inn, where there were few such household obligations to distract me – dating from 1734, the inn is known locally for hosting Olson while he taught a course at the university in the autumn of 1969. Writing this account back in London, I could wish for at least another two weeks at UConn, exploring letters from the less famous members of the Dorn-Olson correspondence nexus. But as Lytle Shaw of New York University pointed out when I met him briefly at the Dodd Center, working in archives is a bit like shopping – even if you arrive with a fixed plan, you’re as likely as not to leave with something completely unexpected.

– Louis Goddard

Climate Change in the American Mind
: Dr. Anthony Leiserowitz

Leiserowitz-Anthony

Join us on Thursday, November 20 at 4pm as we welcome Dr. Anthony Leiserowitz to Konover Auditorium as the third distinguished lecturer in the Teale Lecture Series.  The Edwin Way Teale Lecture Series brings leading scholars and scientists to UConn to present public lectures on nature and the environment.  All lectures are free and open to the public.

Dr. Leiserowitz is the Director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication and a Research Scientist at the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Yale University. He will report on recent trends in Americans’ climate change knowledge, attitudes, policy support, and behavior and discuss strategies for more effective public engagement.

Dr. Leiserowitz is a widely recognized expert on American and international public opinion on global warming, including public perception of climate change risks, support and opposition for climate policies, and willingness to make individual behavioral change. His research investigates the psychological, cultural, political, and geographic factors that drive public environmental perception and behavior. He has conducted survey, experimental, and field research at scales ranging from the global to the local, including international studies, the United States, individual states (Alaska and Florida), municipalities (New York City), and with the Inupiaq Eskimo of Northwest Alaska.  He also conducted the first empirical assessment of worldwide public values, attitudes, and behaviors regarding global sustainability, including environmental protection, economic growth, and human development.