Richard Crangle, Mervyn Heard and Ine van Dooren, Introduction: Realms of light, pp. 6-8
Richard Crangle, Devices and desires: some themes and strands of lantern history, pp. 11-12
Mervyn Heard, Now you see it, now you don't: the magician and the magic lantern, pp. 13-24
Mike Simkin, The magic lantern and the child, pp. 25-33
Jens Ruchatz (trans. Ine van Dooren), Travelling by slide: how the art of projection met the world of travel, pp. 34-41
Vanessa Davids (trans. Ine van Dooren), Nudes and more: a short description of a pornographic lantern slide collection, pp. 42-45
Mervyn Heard and Richard Crangle, The temperance phantasmagoria, pp. 46-55
Stephen Bottomore, A word paints a thousand pictures: the magic lantern in language and metaphor, pp. 56-61
Helen Weston, In the eye of the artist: the lanternist's image in visual representation, pp. 62-74
Ine van Dooren, Projection international: the lantern in different national contexts, pp. 75-76
Mike Simkin, Birmingham and the magic lantern, pp. 77-85
Wendy Bird, Enlightenment and entertainment: the magic lantern in late 18th- and early 19th-century Madrid, pp. 86-91
David Francis, The AOUW: or, what collecting lantern slides may turn up, pp. 92-96
Helen Weston, The light of wisdom: lanterns and political propaganda in Revolutionary France, pp. 97-104
Terry Borton and Deborah Borton, How many American lantern shows in a year?, pp. 105-115
Daan Buddingh (trans. Ine van Dooren), A peep into history: the 19th-century magic lantern in the Netherlands, pp. 116-123
Ian Edwards, The Edwards family visual archive, 1898-2005: a century of magic lantern use by one Australian family, pp. 124-132
Richard Crangle, People and places: case studies of the lantern in use, pp. 133-134
Hauke Lange-Fuchs, Samuel Reyher of the University of Kiel: the first audio-visual lecturer?, pp. 135-137
Lester Smith, Entertainment and amusement, education and instruction: lectures at the Royal Polytechnic Institution, pp. 138-145
Jeremy Brooker, Paganini's ghost: musical resources of the Royal Polytechnic Institution (1838-1881), pp. 146-154
Hauke Lange-Fuchs, For kings, princes and nobles: some early uses of the lantern in the world of government, pp. 155-158
Edwin Dawes and Mervyn Heard, M. Henry's dissolving views, pp. 159-161
Mark Butterworth, A lantern tour of star-land: the astronomer Robert Ball and his magic lantern lectures, pp. 162-173
Richard Crangle, Mission unaccomplished: W.T. Stead, Charles W. Hastings and the Magic Lantern Mission, pp. 174-184
Stephen Herbert, A slice of lantern life: lantern presentations in and around Hastings in early 1881, pp. 185-192
Mervyn Heard, The lantern is not dead: lanterns and slides in the 20th century and beyond, pp. 193-194
Peter Gillies, Slides for advertising and propaganda, pp. 195-202
Deborah Harlan, The archaeology of lantern slides: the Teaching Slide Collection of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, pp. 203-210
Jack Judson, The wondrous Brenkert Master Brenograph, pp. 211-213
Vanessa Davids and Els de Roon Hertoge (trans. Ine van Dooren), A skull sticker and what it can lead to..., pp. 214-221
Ann Hecht, Hermann at home: 'magic lantern parties' in the 1970s, pp. 222-226
Richard Crangle, Little yellow boxes: family slide shows in the 1960s and 1970s, pp. 227-230
Vanessa Davids (trans. Ine van Dooren), Diascoop re-invents the magic lantern: a conversation with Ida Lohman, visual artist, pp. 231-234
Carrie Wiltshire, 'What's that?': interpreting the magic lantern for museum visitors, pp. 235-238
Ludwig Vogl-Bienek (trans. Richard Crangle), Opera on the lantern stage: Wagner's Ring and Der Fliegende Holländer as performed by the Illuminago-Theater, pp. 239-245
Mervyn Heard, The up-to-date lanternist: shows and showpeople in the 21st century, pp. 246-259
reviewed in: Robert Macdonald, ‘Review: Realms of light’ in NMLJ 10.1 (Autumn 2005)
Record created by Richard Crangle. Last updated 10 May 2020
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