Ruskin and the dawn of the modern
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Ruskin and the dawn of the modern
Oxford University Press, 1999
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This interdisciplinary collection of original essays reconsiders John Ruskin's legacy, suggesting that the vigour and vitality of his late work played an important role in shaping the twentieth-century mind. The contributors have focused on such diverse areas as Ruskin's thinking on music, his impact on social reform policies and the British Labour movement, his influence on scientific and artistic education, the complexities of his relationship with aestheticism,
and on his writing in Fors Clavigera. Together, the essays expose the extraordinarily pervasive influence that Ruskin's work had on central cultural debates of the late Victorian era. Moreover, they overturn received assumptions about Ruskin's significance in the dawning of the modern
sensibility.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Ruskin and Social Reform
- Ruskin's Science of the 1870s: Science, Education, and the Nation
- Ruskin, Oxford, and the British Labour Movement 1880-1914
- A Line of Absolute Correctness: Teaching Drawing at Oxford
- Goddesses of Instruction and Desire: Ruskin and Music
- Ruskin and the Aesthetes
- Myth and Gender in Ruskin's Science
- Ruskin's Multiple Writing: Fors Clavigera
- Index
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