Browse Items (16 total)

Guillié_Essay_1.png
These engravings are from an 1819 essay by the director of Paris' institute for the blind. They depict the punches and matrices used to print a twenty-five letter alphabet that was discernible by touch—the two sides of the "u" were separated to…

Guillié_Essay_2.png
Not unlike letterpress cases for the sighted, these cases for the blind were organized according to letter, case (upper or lower), signs, accented letters, figures, etc. They were set at a forty-five degree angle so that the letters would not move…

Granny_frontispiece.jpg
The frontispiece (illustration before the title page) of the book depicts the protagonist, a girl named Snowflower, seated in her magical chair. She grips one of its arms with both hands and looks past the viewer to the right. While we do not see the…

Granny_LordsofCastles.jpg
Woodwender and Loveleaves are the children of two kind kings and promised to marry each other in “The Lords of the White and Grey Castles.” When their fathers go missing, their wicked stewards force the children to herd swine and sleep on straw. When…

Granny_GreedyShepherd.jpg
Like 19th century stories with blind characters, Granny’s Wonderful Chair deals with the significance of music. In "The Greedy Shepherd," brother shepherds Clutch and Kind traverse the mountains in search of their lost flock. Here, Pyle illustrates…

Granny_ChildeCharity.jpg
In “The Story of Childe Charity,” the titular character is a young orphan in the care of her greedy aunt and uncle. Pyle’s ink illustration depicts her in her misfortune, a wistful look on her face as she sits on a stool and gazes at what could be…

Granny_SourCivil_1.jpg
In the chair’s story “Sour and Civil,” a young fisherman named Civil finds himself whisked down into the world of merpeople. This piece illustrates the fear and wonder of this moment; once again, physicality is present in the way Civil grips the boat…

Granny_SourCivil_2.jpg
Pyle displays Browne’s themes of wealth and poverty in her depiction of the mer-king’s treasures. With arms outstretched, the mer-king shows off his jewel-encrusted necklace, long robe, and decorated vases. Civil, on the other hand, is partially…

Granny_Merrymind_1.jpg
The themes of sacrifice, perseverance, and finding worth in what is broken shine through in “The Story of Merrymind.” One of thirteen children, Merrymind is discouraged that the fiddle he spent his allowance on cannot be mended with ordinary…

Granny_Merrymind_2.jpg
This highlight of Merrymind’s broken fiddle is a curious thing to include at the chapter’s conclusion. After Merrymind meets the night-spinners and plays music which frees an entire community from slavish work, Browne writes that “man, woman, and…
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