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Reporting from: https://exhibits.library.cornell.edu/nabokovs-net/about/no-mere-curios-b05afef2-c5dc-4cb7-8ab4-f1d2dd738d9c

No Mere Curios

Content & Text: Eveline Ferretti, Paul Jensen, Jenny Leijonhufvud

Exhibit Design: Jenny Leijonhufvud

Entomology Books in Mann Library

Editions of all the butterfly books that Nabokov spotlighted in The New Yorker can be found in the special collections of Mann Library. They are part of a collection of books, journals and other resources in the study of insects that has been vigorously curated over the past 150+ years to advance research in general and applied entomology, parasitology, medical entomology, ecology, and zoological nomenclature. Members of Cornell's entomology faculty have been strong partners in the collection's development, perhaps none more so than Professor John Henry Comstock (1849-1931) and his professional partner Anna Botsford Comstock (1854-1930), who both played pivotal roles in the laying the foundation for one of the world's best entomology libraries and for Cornell University's enduring global lead in the study of insect biology and in the life sciences.

Another key figure was lepidopterist John George Franclemont (1912-2004), who taught entomology at Cornell from 1953 to 1977. Franclemont was still a Cornell graduate student earning a doctorate in entomology when Vladimir Nabokov began teaching at the University in the fall of 1948. Even before Nabokov's arrival, the two had enjoyed a friendly professional correspondence, and their collegial interactions continued during Nabokov's time here. In the course of his long career in entomology, Franclemont developed an extraordinary personal library of both specimens and books, many rare and valuable volumes among them. Might conversations that Franclemont and Nabokov enjoyed with each other during their encounters in Ithaca have provided inspiration for some of the rare book acquisitions Franclemont would make (and eventually donate to the Library) over his lifetime? We may never know for sure, and yet, it's easy to imagine a connection.


Bibliography

Anon. “Ernst Hofmann,“ Deutsche Entomologische Zeitung Iris 5 (1892). https://sdei.senckenberg.de/biographies/index.php

Anon. “Jean Alphonse Boisduval,” Bulletin of the Brooklyn Entomological Society, 9, 1914.

Ball, George E. The Art of Insect Illustration and Threads of Entomological History: [Exhibition] December 2004 to March 2005, Bruce Peel Special Collections Library. Edmonton: University of Alberta Libraries, 2005.

Cockfield, Jamie H. White Crow: The Life and Times of the Grand Duke Nicholas Mikhailovich Romanov: 1859-1919. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2002.

Davis, Natalie Zemon. Women on the Margins: Three Seventeenth-Century Lives. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1995.

Heller, Florian. “Esper, Eugen Johann Christoph” Neue Deutsche Biographie, 4 (1959)

Knight, David M. Zoological Illustration: an Essay towards a History of Printed Zoological Pictures. Folkstone, Eng.: Dawson, 1977.

Leach, W. (2013). Butterfly people: an American encounter with the beauty of the world. New York: Pantheon Books.

Nissen, Claus. Die Zoologische Buchillustration: Ihre Bibliographie Und Geschichte. Stuttgart: A. Hiersemann, 1966.

Oberthür, Charles, Annales de la Societe Entomologique France (5) 10 (1880): 129-138.

Rosehhauer, Wilhelm Gottlieb Esper, “Eugen Johann Christoph, ” Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) 6 (1877)

Wohlfahrt, Theodor A. “Schmetterlinge in der Illustration,” in Die Zoologische Buch Illustration: Ihre Bibliographie und Geschichte, Bd 2 (13), ed. by Claus Nissen, Stuttgart: Anton Hiersemann, 1975, pp 306-326