In:Transnational Books for Children 1750-1900: Producers, consumers, encounters
Edited by Charlotte Appel, Nina Christensen and M.O. Grenby
[Children’s Literature, Culture, and Cognition 15] 2023
► pp. 110–134
Chapter 5Comenius in New York
Published online: 8 August 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/clcc.15.05cra
https://doi.org/10.1075/clcc.15.05cra
Abstract
While the seventeenth-century humanist and educator John Amos Comenius (1592–1670) never travelled to New York,
his 1658 Orbis Sensualium Pictus (Visible World in Pictures) did, as a seventeenth- and eighteenth-century London
import and as an 1810 New York imprint. Editions and expressively annotated individual copies of this image-rich, encyclopaedic,
bilingual English-Latin book for children chart the social life of the Orbis Pictus in the United States. The first
US facsimile (1887, Syracuse, New York) echoes the Orbis Sensualium
Pictus’s diasporic roots, as a reader’s marks in the sole copy in the New York Public Library situate it amid the early
twentieth century’s migrations of Eastern and Southern Europeans to New York.
Article outline
- The world in pictures
- The Orbis Pictus in the United States
- Traces of US child readers
- The Orbis Pictus in the New York Public Library
- Transnational readers
- Conclusion
Notes References
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