Houghton Library Blog

Writings on Special Collections and Archives at Harvard University's Houghton Library

  • About
  • Information for Authors

There’s an app for that

31 March 2015 houghtonmodern Collections in Focus

Eupantophone 1This post is part of an ongoing series featuring material from the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection. 

Henri Austruy, born in 1871, was an attorney and editor of the journal La nouvelle revue from 1913 to 1940, when occupying Nazi forces shut the journal down. 1940 is also the approximate date of Austruy’s unrecorded death, which may have been at the hands of the same forces. During his editorship, Austruy also produced several idiosyncratic works of turn-of-the-century science fiction and fantasy, which used alternate histories and imagined futures to lampoon and allegorize contemporary society. These novels, underappreciated in their time and nearly unknown today, include L’ère “Petitpaon”, ou, La paix universelle (1906). In it, Austruy satirizes his bellicose civilization by describing a near-future world utterly at peace; less than a decade after its publication, Europe would be engulfed in war.

The volume pictured here, L’eupantophone, centers around the eponymous machine, a modified phonograph that can automatically convert text to the spoken word, and its inventor, Victor Blancadet. Blancadet, a blind man, further develops his wondrous eupantophone to convert light into sound by modifying vibrations in the ether, allowing him to “see” by means of sound; the main action of the story follows the societal consequences of widespread access to this transformative device. (Another Austruy novel, L’olotelepan, also involves a fantastical machine and its effects on humanity; the olotelepan is able to project one’s senses to chosen recipients at any distance.) In the illustration shown here, Blancadet reveals his blindness to an astonished journalist, who mistakes the eupantaphone’s powers of text-to-speech for Blancadet’s ventriloquistic skills.

Eupantophone 2

L’eupantophone: FC9.Au797.900e; HOLLIS number 14303711

Thanks to rare book cataloger Ryan Wheeler for contributing this post.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Google+ (Opens in new window)
Tags: 20th century, Julio Mario Santo Domingo, Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection, Santo Domingo Collection, science fiction, speculative fiction, technology, world war ii
  • « Venom for Luther, Spectacles for Calvin
  • The Glass Menagerie at 70 »

Search Houghton Library Blog

Recent Posts

  • Our URL Has Changed
  • Celebrating the Launch of the Gatsos Translation Project
  • Harvard Theatre Collection’s Lincoln Assassination Playbills

Blog Archives

Categories

More Houghton Blogs

  • Hyde Catablog
  • Modern Books and Manuscripts
  • Woodberry Poetry Room

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

WCAG 2.0 (Level AA)

CC BY-NC 4.0 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Proudly powered by WordPress
Protected by Akismet • Blog with WordPress