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Pittsburgh Authors: Literary Degrees of Separation, Spring 2013 @ Archives & Special Collections: Exhibit Info

Exhibit of documents from the Mary Roberts Rinehart Papers (1831-1970), Hervey Allen Papers (1831-1965), Lawrence Lee Papers (1920-1978), Walter and Martha Leuba Collection, Nixon Theatre: Pittsburgh Theatre Collection, and Special Collections

Exhibit Location & Hours

The exhibit Literary Degrees of Separation will be on display in the Special Collections Reading Room in Room 363 Hillman Library through August 14, 2013. The exhibit is free and open to the public during the deparment's regular hours: Monday-Friday, 9am-4:45pm.

Special Collections Department

Archives & Special Collections

A&SC at Hillman Library

3960 Forbes Avenue

Pittsburgh, PA 15260

Phone: 412-648-8190

Email: ULS-Archives&SpecialCollections@pitt.edu

Hours:

M-F: 9:00am-4:45pm

 Hours | Staff | Directions

 

Introduction

Literary Degrees of Separation:

The Manuscripts and Special Editions of Pittsburgh Authors

This exhibit  shines light on the interconnections among select manuscript collections in the Special Collections Department at the University of Pittsburgh. Notably, the department houses the papers of Hervey Allen, Mary Roberts Rinehart, Lawrence Lee, and the Walter and Martha Leuba Collection. These manuscript and rare book collections represent Pittsburgh native/Pittsburgh based authors who wrote predominately in the early to mid-20th century.  Beside their place of origin, the papers of these authors all exhibit connections, or numerous degrees of separation, between each other in terms of their creative endeavors, their practice, their experiences, their affiliations, and shared relationships with other relevant literary figures of the 20th century. 

Subsequently, the exhibition demonstrates the literary creative process as it happened during the early to mid-20th century, before electronic word processors were available. From straight pinning parts of drafts together, to early typescript, and later iterations of word processing, the materials on display show the evolution of the creative process throughout the 20th century.