The Rescue of Romanticism - Walter Pater and John Ruskin (Hardcover, 1)


Valuable and timely in its long historical and critical perspective on the legacy of romanticism to Victorian art and thought, "The Rescue of Romanticism" is the first book-length study of the close intellectual relationship between Walter Pater and John Ruskin, the two most important Victorian critics of art. Kenneth Daley explores the work and thought of both writers in context with other Victorian writers, and enlarges the issues at stake between them, connecting these issues to ongoing artistic, cultural, and political concerns of the modern world.
Professor Daley gives a more finely honed picture than ever before of romanticism's emergence as a literary concept in Victorian England, detailing the political differences that characterize the opposition between John Ruskin and his younger contemporary, Walter Pater, over the nature of romanticism. Individual chapters reassess the Victorian reception of such romantic figures as Wordsworth, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Leonardo, and Michelangelo.
Daley demonstrates how Pater's "modern" reading of romanticism emerged from Ruskin's distrust of romanticism and from Ruskin's arguments and examples defining pathetic fallacy. His discussion of Ruskin's Oxford lectures and their timing in Pater's developing career refresh the intersections of the two bodies of work and the portrait of the Victorian period in general.

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Product Description

Valuable and timely in its long historical and critical perspective on the legacy of romanticism to Victorian art and thought, "The Rescue of Romanticism" is the first book-length study of the close intellectual relationship between Walter Pater and John Ruskin, the two most important Victorian critics of art. Kenneth Daley explores the work and thought of both writers in context with other Victorian writers, and enlarges the issues at stake between them, connecting these issues to ongoing artistic, cultural, and political concerns of the modern world.
Professor Daley gives a more finely honed picture than ever before of romanticism's emergence as a literary concept in Victorian England, detailing the political differences that characterize the opposition between John Ruskin and his younger contemporary, Walter Pater, over the nature of romanticism. Individual chapters reassess the Victorian reception of such romantic figures as Wordsworth, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Leonardo, and Michelangelo.
Daley demonstrates how Pater's "modern" reading of romanticism emerged from Ruskin's distrust of romanticism and from Ruskin's arguments and examples defining pathetic fallacy. His discussion of Ruskin's Oxford lectures and their timing in Pater's developing career refresh the intersections of the two bodies of work and the portrait of the Victorian period in general.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Ohio University Press

Country of origin

United States

Release date

October 2001

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

October 2001

Authors

Dimensions

216 x 140 x 18mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

176

Edition

1

ISBN-13

978-0-8214-1382-1

Barcode

9780821413821

Categories

LSN

0-8214-1382-1



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