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1

Considine, J. "Darby and Joan and the Athenian Mercury". Notes and Queries 55, nr 3 (1.07.2008): 328–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjn067.

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2

Jasenowski, Jaroslaw. "Coffeehouse Curiosities: Materiality and Musealization Strategies in The Athenian Mercury". Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 47, nr 1 (marzec 2024): 77–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1754-0208.12929.

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AbstractBased on the epistolary interaction with readers, John Dunton's Athenian Mercury (1691–97) provided a platform for the discussion and dissemination of knowledge drawn from diverse fields. Plagued by doubts about its reliability, the periodical constantly had to (re‐)assert its credibility. One of the strategies the Mercury employed was to emphasize the physicality of objects via text, practising a performance of materiality. Taking the letter‐as‐object as its starting point, this article argues that materiality played a crucial role in not only the representation but also the active production of truthfulness. Examining how Dunton's periodical leveraged notions of the coffeehouse as an exhibition space, this article explores how the Mercury drew on musealization strategies to represent material objects to underline their existence and its own credibility. Interpellating readers as virtuosi, the Athenian Society staged the coffeehouse and even itself as a walk‐in curiosity cabinet, turning letters into matter and fiction into fact.
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3

Handley, Sasha. "Reclaiming Ghosts in 1690s England". Studies in Church History 41 (2005): 345–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400000309.

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On Wednesday 1 June 1692, a young man, about fifteen years of age, went to his bed. He had no sooner lain down than he heard ‘a Hand sweeping on the wall’. Then it came ‘with a rushing noise on his beds-head’ and ‘stroaked him over the face twice very gently’. Opening his eyes he saw before him ‘an apparition of a woman cloathed in black apparel’. Following this eerie encounter, other members of the family claimed to have seen the apparition ‘in the same room with a lighted candle’. Perplexed by these unexplained visits the mistress of this ‘Civiliz’d Family’ wrote to the editors of the bi-weekly periodical the Athenian Mercury desiring to know ‘what should be the occasion of the disturbance’ and ‘whether it be advisable to ask the question of the apparition’. Samuel Wesley (father of John), Church of England minister and co-editor of the Athenian Mercury, advised the woman to have a chat with the ghost, to find out its purpose and to discover how it might be satisfied.
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4

Bhowmik, Urmi. "Facts and Norms in the Marketplace of Print: John Dunton's Athenian Mercury". Eighteenth-Century Studies 36, nr 3 (2003): 345–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ecs.2003.0023.

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5

Beebee, Thomas O. "All the News That Is Fit to Steal: Charles Gildon, Ferrante Pallavicino, and the Geopolitics of Rifled Mailbag Fiction". Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 47, nr 1 (marzec 2024): 31–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1754-0208.12928.

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AbstractCharles Gildon (1665–1724) is known today as the ultimate hack writer of Restoration England. Nonetheless, his two fiction collections in the ‘rifled mailbag’ genre — The Post‐Boy Rob'd of His Mail (1692) and The Post‐Man Robb'd of His Mail (1719) — contain insights concerning the structures and practices of information gathering in early modern Europe. This essay places these fictions by Gildon in their historical and literary contexts, including his repurposing of the Italian Il Corriero svaligiato by Ferrante Pallavicino, the relation to John Dunton's Athenian Mercury, and the use of addresses and occupations of letters to describe the geopolitics of Restoration London and its surround.
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6

Berry, Helen. "An Early Coffee House Periodical and its Readers: the Athenian Mercury, 1691–1697". London Journal 25, nr 1 (1.05.2000): 14–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/030580300793080068.

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7

Claydon, T. "Gender, Society and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: The Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury". English Historical Review 119, nr 480 (1.02.2004): 214–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/119.480.214.

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8

Berry, Helen. "Democracy's Fatal Flaw: Anonymity and the Normalization of Offence in John Dunton's Epistolary Periodicals". Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 47, nr 1 (marzec 2024): 95–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1754-0208.12931.

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AbstractEpistolary periodicals associated with English coffee house culture have often been associated with Jürgen Habermas' model for the rise of the ‘bourgeois public sphere’. Habermas proposed this ultimately gave rise to the free articulation of public opinion and the emergence of democratic values. Written at a time of socio‐political upheaval, John Dunton's serial publications relied upon anonymous authorship, particularly his most famous periodical, the Athenian Mercury (1691–97), which pioneered the question‐and‐answer format and gave rise to many imitations. In the present era, we are witnessing democracy imperilled by the proliferation of AI‐driven ‘fake news’. This paper proposes that the origins of this phenomenon may be found in epistolary periodicals which normalized giving and receiving offence in print. The pernicious quality of anonymous print, free from personal accountability or consequences, embedded from its inception a fatal flaw in the project of constituting a democratic public sphere.
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9

Bell, M. "Review: Gender, Society and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: The Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury". Library 5, nr 1 (1.03.2004): 87–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/library/5.1.87.

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10

Graf, Amara. "Gender, Society, and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: The Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury (review)". Libraries & the Cultural Record 40, nr 1 (2005): 93–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/lac.2005.0010.

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11

HARRIS, BOB. "H. Berry, Gender, society and print culture in late-Stuart England: the cultural world of the Athenian Mercury. (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003.) Pages xiv+264. 40.00." Continuity and Change 19, nr 1 (maj 2004): 205–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268416004254960.

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12

Shoemaker, Robert B. "Helen Berry, Gender, Society and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: The Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003. xiv + 264 pp. 8 plates. 6 tables. Bibliography. £40.00". Urban History 32, nr 1 (maj 2005): 178–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926805262934.

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13

Roos, Anna Marie. "Helen Berry. Gender, Society and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: The Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury. Burlington, Vt: Ashgate. 2003. Pp. xiii, 264. $69.95. ISBN 0-7546-0496-9." Albion 36, nr 3 (2004): 523–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4054395.

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14

Weil, Rachel. "Helen Berry. Gender, Society and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: The Cultural World of the “Athenian Mercury.” Women and Gender in the Early Modern World. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003. Pp. 264. $69.95 (cloth)." Journal of British Studies 45, nr 3 (lipiec 2006): 646–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/507216.

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15

Cowan, Brian. "Gender, Society, and Print Culture in Late‐Stuart England: The Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury. By Helen Berry. Women and Gender in the Early Modern World. Edited by, Allyson Poska and Abby Zanger. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003. Pp. xiv+264. $69.95." Journal of Modern History 77, nr 4 (grudzień 2005): 1073–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/499848.

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16

Cocca, Carolyn. "Negotiating the Third Wave of Feminism in Wonder Woman". PS: Political Science & Politics 47, nr 01 (29.12.2013): 98–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096513001662.

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Created by lawyer and psychologist William Moulton Marston, Wonder Woman first appeared more than 70 years ago, “as lovely as Aphrodite, as wise as Athena, with the speed of Mercury, and the strength of Hercules” (Marston and Peter 1941). While she conforms to traditional articulations of gender in the way she performs an attractive, female, white, heterosexual, middle-to-upper class woman, she also unsettles gendered boundaries through performing a determined, astute, formidable warrior at the same time. This has led to a number of writers exploring whether Wonder Woman can or should be viewed as feminist.
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17

VAN RUYVEN-ZEMAN, Zsuzsanna. "Pieter Kouwenhorn, 'uytnemend teykenaar ende gelase-sgrijver' en het carton van het universiteitsglas in de Pieterskerk te Leiden". Oud Holland - Quarterly for Dutch Art History 117, nr 3-4 (2004): 162–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187501704x00377.

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AbstractThe little known window design and corresponding glass cartoon kept in the Municipal Archives of Leiden are the remains of a now lost window with the representation of Pallas Athena and her owl, given by the Board of Governors of Leiden University to the Pieterskerk. They have been first published by Pelinck in I943 with the correct destination, donor's name and even the date, I629 (note 2). He was able to do so by linking the drawings with a description from c. I630 by the Utrecht antiquarian Arnoldus Buchelius and the published resolution of the Cu-rators taken on I4 May I629 (notes 6, 9). The Curators offered a gift of glass to the former churchmaster Heinrick Egbertsz. van der Hal, whereby no artist's name or subject matter are mentioned, only the obligatory inclusion of the city arms. The practical arrangement for the commission was left to the Burgomasters of Leyden, who were all members of the Board of Governors. The small-scale drawing, severely damaged, concentrates on the architectural and heraldic design (fig. i). An aedicule supported by Corinthian columns and crowned by a pediment offers room below to the city arms of Leiden and the university flag, with a still life of books and globes in front, covering the floor. Two more coats of arms are depicted on either side of the pediment: on the left the arms of Holland held by the Dutch lion, and on the right those of Prince William of Orange, founding father of the university, held by Fame. The drawing provided with scale indications and an unfinished, alternative design on the reverse is apparantly not a vidimus, but a working document to facilitate the elaboration of the cartoon. The latter consists of two long segments for the first two lights and two shorter ones, with the missing information added either on the reverse of the same strip or of the corresponding second (for the third) and first (for the fourth) lights (figs. 2-9). The working method is so far similar to that of the Gouda cartoons, of which the latest pieces date from the early I7th century. With the repetition of parts of the architecture in mirror image the Leiden cartoon is now considered, contrary to Pelinck, complete. It represents minor improvements in composition and ornament with respect to the small drawing, but most important, it depicts the figures in the second and third lights, still missing in the small design. Pallas Athena, goddess of wisdom and protector of science and the arts is standing on a pedestal in the aedicule, paging in a book placed on the cathedra on her leftside. Her attributes, the owl and the shield with Medusa head, are nearby. Below her feet four children are engaged in writing and reading. They are identified now as personifications of the four then faculties of the young university: on the left theology, distinguished by a piece of paper inscribed with Hebrew-like characters bound to the figure's head, and medicine, depicted as a naked child, only the head covered by a drapery. The two helmeted boys on the right represent law and philosophy. The donation can not be linked to any special occasion, in I629 the university existed just 54 years. The old attribution by Pelinck on presumed stylistic ground of design and cartoon to the Utrecht painter and glass-painter Jan Gerritsz. van Bronchorst (c. I603-I66I) was already rejected in the past in the artist's biography on the same ground (note 25). A new candidate is proposed now in the person of the Leiden artist Pieter Kouwenhorn (I599/I600-I654), who originated from Haarlem and was inscribed in I6I9 as master glass-painter in the rolls of the Leiden Guild of St. Luke. Although he has already been studied in the past in some detail, more information is given now on his life and the small œuvre of his drawings (notes 29-30, 56). The Burgomasters of Leiden, responsible for commissioning the artist, were familiar with him, as Kouwenhorn has just finished in I628 a documented window in the Aldermen's Chamber of the City Hall (fig. II). Although the figural scenes of this cartoon are smaller and they are therefore executed in the favourite technique of the artist in pen, grey and brown ink and wash instead of black and white chalk, they also present certain parallels in support of the attribution. More stylistic arguments are provided by Kouwenhorn's signed drawing with a related subject matter, Minerva and Mercury from I635 in the Album Amicorum of the Leiden scholar Petrus Scriverius (fig. I5). The new attribution is finally substantiated by documents. The artist's correct Christian name, mis-spelled surname and his qualification as a glass-painter occur in the church administration, when he was paid on 25th of March I630 the sum of f 6 s I4, without precising his services; on 30th December of the same year payment of f I0 s I6 is recorded again to him as Pieter Pieters. (notes 5I, 52). The first item most probably concerns the customary gratuity given by the churchwardens after installment of the window in the Pieterskerk, with payment perhaps for additional work in December. Completion of the glass within a year, announced by the Curators of the university on I4th May I629 is reasonable, and full payment was due from the latter. The question remains, if Kouwenhorn was only the glass-painter or also the author of the window's design and the draftsman of the cartoon with figures of exceptional quality, which are executed more carefully than the protagonists of the smaller cartoon for the Aldermen's Chamber. His oeuvre of independent drawings made in a variety of techniques (figs. I0, I2, I4, I6, I7), the reference made to him shortly after his death as an excellent draftsman, and his involvement in giving drawing lessons leave no doubt as to his capacities in this field (notes 36-38). Together with Bronchorst, Kouwenhorn follows in the footsteps of such famous I6th-century glass-painters as the Crabeths from Gouda and Willem Tybout from Haarlem, who all worked from own design. As to Kouwenhorn, unfortunately none of his windows is preserved. The exact location of the university glass in the Pieterskerk is unknown, just like the date when it fell into decay and was removed.
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18

Muse, Kevin. "VARIVM ET MVTABILE SEMPER FEMINA: DIVINE WARNINGS AND HASTY DEPARTURES IN ODYSSEY 15 AND AENEID 4". Classical Quarterly, 31.07.2023, 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009838823000290.

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Abstract In his second appearance to Aeneas in Aeneid 4 Mercury drives the hero to flee Carthage with a false allegation that Dido is planning an attack, capping his warning with an infamous sententia about the mutability of female emotion. Building on a previous suggestion that Mercury's first speech to Aeneas is modelled on Athena's admonishment of Telemachus at the opening of Odyssey 15, this article proposes that Mercury's second speech as well is modelled on Athena's warning, in which the goddess uses misdirection about Penelope's intentions and a misogynistic gnōmē about the changeability of women's affections to spur Telemachus’ departure from Sparta. After setting out how Virgil divides his imitation of Athena's speech verbally and thematically between Mercury's two speeches, the discussion turns to why both Athena and Mercury adopt these deceptive tactics. The speeches are shown to be culminations of the poets’ similar approaches to creating doubt and foreboding around the queens’ famed capacities for using δόλος. Common features in the ensuing hasty departures of Telemachus and Aeneas further confirm Virgil's use of Odyssey 15 in devising Aeneas’ escape from Carthage.
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