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Victorian Contexts: Literature and the Visual Arts

Autor Murray Roston
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 1996
Examines how both artist and writer in the Victorian era responded to the shared challenges, assumptions, and dilemmas of their time, often unaware that the same problems were being confronted in the kindred media. The placing of such writers as Dickens, G.Eliot, Hopkins, and Henry James within the context of Victorian painting, architecture, and interior design offers fresh insights into their works, as well as reassessments of such themes as the mid-century representation of the Fallen Woman or the impact of commodity culture upon contemporary aesthetic standards.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781349139880
ISBN-10: 1349139882
Pagini: 255
Ilustrații: VIII, 255 p.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 1996
Editura: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Acknowledgements - List of Illustrations - Introduction - Carlyle's Fire-Baptism - The Fallen Woman - Commodity Culture in Dickens and Browning - George Eliot and the Horizons of Expectation - Hopkins as Poetic Innovator - The Art of Henry James - Notes - Index

Notă biografică

MURRAY ROSTON is Professor of English at Bar Ilan University, Israel. He
also holds a permanent appointment as Adjunct Professor of English at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), where he teaches frequently.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

What, if any, is the relationship between Charles Dickens, and the decorative arts? Between Henry James and Art Nouveau? Between the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins and the paintings of the Impressionists? Recent trends in scholarship have begun to reassess the assumption that the arts of painting and literature are too fundamentally disparate to permit a fruitful comparison between the two. In Victorian Contexts, Murray Roston puts that assumption to rest once and for all, with imaginative and refreshing essays on the similarities and shared themes of the literature, paintings, architecture, and crafts of the nineteenth century. Explaining the value of such an intertextual approach, he argues that in every generation there is "a central complex of inherited assumptions and urgent contemporary concerns to which each creative artist responds in his or her individual way".