Ruskin's God
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Ruskin's God
(Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture, 24)
Cambridge University Press, 2006, c1999
- : pbk
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Note
"Paperback re-issue"--Back cover
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this 1999 book, Michael Wheeler challenges critical orthodoxy by arguing that John Ruskin's writing is underpinned by a sustained trust in divine wisdom: a trust nurtured by his imaginative engagement with King Solomon and the temple in Jerusalem, and with the wisdom literature of the Old Testament. In Modern Painters, The Seven Lamps of Architecture and The Stones of Venice, belief in the wisdom of God the Father informed Ruskin's Evangelical natural theology and his celebration of Turner's landscape painting, while the wisdom of God the Son lay at the heart of his Christian aesthetics. Whereas 'the author of Modern Painters' sought to teach his readers how to see architecture, paintings and landscapes, the 'Victorian Solomon' whose religious life was troubled, and who created various forms of modern wisdom literature in works such as Unto this Last, The Queen of the Air and Fors Clavigera, wished to teach them how to live.
Table of Contents
- List of plates
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1. Introduction: 'To enlighten a People by your Wisdom': the divine commission
- Part I. The author of Modern Painters: 2. 'The Shechinah of the blue': in God's temple
- 3. 'The Peace of God' and a Christian theory of art
- 4. 'The Book-Temple': a Protestant beholder of St Mark's
- 5. 'True sacred art' and Christ the great high priest
- 6. Solomon's 'Christian royalty': a rite of passage in Turin
- Part II. Victorian Solomon: 7. Solomon's 'maxims concerning wealth'
- 8. Science, myth and a creative wisdom
- 9. St George, St Francis and the rule of love and wisdom
- 10. Fragments of Christendom in Venice and Amiens
- 11. The 'visible Heaven' and apocalyptic wisdom
- Appendix
- Index.
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