Skip to main content
Home
Toggle menu
  • Home
  • Editions
    • Latest
    • Explore
  • Praxis
    • Latest
    • Explore
  • Gallery
    • Explore Latest Exhibits
    • Explore Past Exhibits
    • Explore All Images
  • Unbound
  • Reviews & Resources
    • Book Reviews
    • Index of Authors
    • Booklists
    • Timelines
  • Syllabus Repository
  • About
    • Masthead
    • History
    • Index of Contributors
    • Submissions, Use & Citation Guidelines
    • Archived Material

James Robert Allard

  • Read more about James Robert Allard

Aishah Al-Shatti

  • Read more about Aishah Al-Shatti

Siraj Ahmed

  • Read more about Siraj Ahmed

Romanticism and Theory: the 1970s

  • Read more about Romanticism and Theory: the 1970s

Unknown

  • Read more about Unknown

Ira Sadoff reads "London" by William Blake

  • Read more about Ira Sadoff reads "London" by William Blake

Don Paterson reads "To Shakespeare" by Hartley Coleridge

  • Read more about Don Paterson reads "To Shakespeare" by Hartley Coleridge

Gallery

Page Title

Explore Past Exhibits

  • Read more about Gallery

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Current page 3

Gallery

Page Title

Explore All Images

  • Read more about Gallery

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page 22
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Page 27
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Current page 30

Forget-me-not: Souvenirs of Girlhood in the Transatlantic Album

floral design with script
Curators
Deidre Lynch
Faith Pak
Norah Murphy
Date Published
March 2022
Description

In Stéphanie de Genlis’s 1798 novel Les Petits émigrés: ou Correspondance des jeuns enfans (translated in 1799 as The Young Exiles and much reprinted over the next two decades), the young heroine, member of a royalist family that has fled revolutionary France for asylum in a country village near Zurich, sends a gift to a cousin who has remained behind. It is a sort of blank book, one that Juliette D’Armilly identifies as a Swiss or German “invention,” and which is to serve her dear Adriana, she writes, as “a book of remembrances” (un livre de souvenirs in the original French). The letter Juliette writes to accompany her present reads like a how-to manual drawn up for her cousin’s use.

  • Read more about Forget-me-not: Souvenirs of Girlhood in the Transatlantic Album

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page 22
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Page 27
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Current page 30
Subscribe to

Masthead

About

Contact Us

sfy39587stp18