As a follow-up to Tuesday's brief post about the glorious Harry Ransom Center, we are pleased to share these three images from the exhibition entitled The Mystique of the Archive:
Hand-corrected typescript of Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, ca. 1992–93. Copyright Tom Stoppard.
Plot chart for Norman Mailer's book Harlot's Ghost, undated.
Completion scheme for Julian Barnes's Flaubert's Parrot, ca. 1983.
All images courtesy of the Harry Ransom Center.
We loved the Ransom Center when we were in Austin -- they were having two excellent exhibits, one on Victorian portraiture and costume, and the other on Arthur Miller.
Posted by: Gwenda | November 06, 2008 at 08:11 AM
I never would have imagined Mailer anal enough to use multiple pens of different colors. Unless of course the red isn't ink but the blood of a deflowered virgin. That would be more his style.
Posted by: Jim | November 06, 2008 at 09:54 AM
It's always interesting to see how author's visualized their works through their scribbles and images and text. I read that future literary historians won't be able to explain an author's wrting process or the way a work might evolve from draft to draft as writing becomes more digital.
I'm sure digital tools will allow some insight into revision, but there's no way they can demonstrate the connections Norman Mailer makes with his scrawls on the page you present.
And I suppose our museums will be online.
Posted by: Grant Faulkner | November 10, 2008 at 09:08 PM