Victorian Thinkers: Carlyle, Ruskin, Arnold, MorrisOxford University Press, 1993 - 428 Seiten Victorian Thinkers contains studies of four of the most influential critics of nineteenth-century British culture. Each was heralded as a prophet in his own lifetime, yet each was also regarded as misguided--even mad--by his contemporaries. Thomas Carlyle, writer of extraordinary stature, radical in thought and style; John Ruskin, who began his career as a critic of painting and architecture and whose views developed to include critiques of economics and social welfare; Matthew Arnold, poet and literary critic, a definer of 'culture' who later turned to social issues; and William Morris, renowned for his work as an artist and designer, champion of a revolutionary socialism which would honor the civilizing effects of the arts. Small masterpieces of insight and concision, this volume offers a perfect introduction to the Victorian era. |
Im Buch
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Seite 281
... Culture and Anarchy's publication : ' The feeling of the harm their [ the Dissenters ' ] isolation from the main current of thought and culture does in the nation , a feeling that has been developed in me by going about among them for ...
... Culture and Anarchy's publication : ' The feeling of the harm their [ the Dissenters ' ] isolation from the main current of thought and culture does in the nation , a feeling that has been developed in me by going about among them for ...
Seite 287
... cultural tastes , yet in other ways it expresses rather poorly the richness of the idea behind his use of ' culture ' . For he treats culture not just as something that we can acquire or possess , but as something that is an active ...
... cultural tastes , yet in other ways it expresses rather poorly the richness of the idea behind his use of ' culture ' . For he treats culture not just as something that we can acquire or possess , but as something that is an active ...
Seite 288
... Culture and Anarchy , it is the former view which predominates , partly because he defines perfection as ' the growth and predominance of our humanity proper , as distinguished from our animality ' ( v . 94 ) , but also perhaps because ...
... Culture and Anarchy , it is the former view which predominates , partly because he defines perfection as ' the growth and predominance of our humanity proper , as distinguished from our animality ' ( v . 94 ) , but also perhaps because ...
Inhalt
Contents Abbreviations | 7 |
Early years | 9 |
Sartor Resartus | 26 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
achieved already appeared architecture Arnold artist beauty became become believed buildings called Carlyle Carlyle's century Church concern contemporary continued course criticism culture death early effect England English essays example experience expression fact feeling figure force French friends House human ideal ideas imagination important influence intellectual interest interpretation John kind later learned less letters literary literature living London look major meaning mind moral Morris Morris's nature never original Oxford Painters painting particularly passage past perhaps period poems poet poetry political present Press prophet prose published qualities question readers reading reason relation religious response role Ruskin seems sense social society style suggests symbolical things thought tion tradition true truth turn University Victorian volume whole writing wrote young
Verweise auf dieses Buch
A Mad, Bad, and Dangerous People? : England 1783-1846: England 1783-1846 Boyd Hilton Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2006 |