William Morris: Centenary Essays
Editat de Peter Faulkner, Peter Prestonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 dec 1998
This well illustrated book celebrates every aspect of the wide-ranging achievements of William Morris - writer, designer, cultural critic, revolutionary socialist - with particular emphasis on their relevance to our own times. The book makes available up-to-date Morris scholarship in accessible form.
Written by a group of international scholars who took part in a conference marking the centenary of the death of Morris in 1896, the book has sections devoted to Morris and Literature (covering texts from The Earthly Paradise to the late romances); Morris, the Arts & Crafts and the New World (including discussions of his influence in Rhode Island, Boston, Ontario and New Zealand); and Morris, Gender and Politics (with fresh consideration of his relation to Victorian ideas of manliness and of the particular qualities of his anti-statist politics). The latter section also draws attention to a hitherto unknown play by Morris's daughter May and concludes with an account of his biographer, the late E.P. Thompson.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780859895774
ISBN-10: 0859895777
Pagini: 298
Ilustrații: 30 illustrations including color
Dimensiuni: 251 x 165 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.72 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF EXETER PRESS
Colecția University of Exeter Press
Locul publicării:United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0859895777
Pagini: 298
Ilustrații: 30 illustrations including color
Dimensiuni: 251 x 165 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.72 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF EXETER PRESS
Colecția University of Exeter Press
Locul publicării:United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Peter Faulkner is Reader in Modern English Literature, University of Exeter. He is currently editor of the Journal of the William Morris Society. Peter Preston is Senior Lecturer in Literature, University of Nottingham, and was formerly Honorary Secretary of the William Morris Society and Editor of its Newsletter.
Cuprins
Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: Morris in 1996
Peter Faulkner and Peter Preston
Part I: Morris and the Environment
1 An Aesthetic Ecocommunist: Morris the Red and Morris the Green
Florence S. Boos
Part II: Morris and Literature
2 Shadow of Turning in The Earthly Paradise
William Blissett
3 Sigurd the Volsung: Heroic Poetry in an Unheroic Age
Simon Dentith
4 The Troy Connection: Myth and History in Sigurd the Volsung
Amanda Hodgson
5 Beatrice and Ellen: Ideal Guides from Hell to Paradise
Adriana Corrado
6 William Morris and the Bear: Theme, Magic and Totem in the Romances
Norman Talbot
7 News from Nowhere and The Spoils of Poynton: Interiors and Exteriors
Norman Kelvin
Part III: Morris, the Arts and Crafts and the New World
8 Sacred and Profane Love: The Oxford Union Murals and the Holy Grail Tapestries
Christine Poulson
9 ‘The Beautiful Book That Was’: William Morris and the Gift of A Book of Verse
Rosie Miles
10 William Morris in New England: Architecture and Design in Late Nineteenth-Century Rhode Island
Pedro Beade
11 William Morris and Nineteenth-Century Boston
Lindsay Leard-Coolidge
12 ‘Every Artist would be a Workman, and Every Workman an Artist’: Morrisian and Arts and Crafts Ideas and Ideals at the Ontario Educational Association 1900-1920
E. Lisa Panayotidis-Stortz
13 The Dilemma of Place: Arts and Crafts Architecture in the Antipodes
Ian J. Lochhead
Part IV: Morris, Gender and Politics
14 William Morris and Victorian Manliness
Jan Marsh
15 Beyond the Law of the Father: The ‘New Woman’ in News from Nowhere
Ady Mineo
16 Lady Griselda’s Dream: May Morris’s Forgotten Play
Janis Londraville
17 Morris, Anit-Statism and Anarchy
Ruth Kinna
18 E. P. Thompson and William Morris
David Goodway
Notes to Chapters
Paper and Lectures delivered at the William Morris Centenary Conference
Contributors
Postscript: The Work of the William Morris Society
Index
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: Morris in 1996
Peter Faulkner and Peter Preston
Part I: Morris and the Environment
1 An Aesthetic Ecocommunist: Morris the Red and Morris the Green
Florence S. Boos
Part II: Morris and Literature
2 Shadow of Turning in The Earthly Paradise
William Blissett
3 Sigurd the Volsung: Heroic Poetry in an Unheroic Age
Simon Dentith
4 The Troy Connection: Myth and History in Sigurd the Volsung
Amanda Hodgson
5 Beatrice and Ellen: Ideal Guides from Hell to Paradise
Adriana Corrado
6 William Morris and the Bear: Theme, Magic and Totem in the Romances
Norman Talbot
7 News from Nowhere and The Spoils of Poynton: Interiors and Exteriors
Norman Kelvin
Part III: Morris, the Arts and Crafts and the New World
8 Sacred and Profane Love: The Oxford Union Murals and the Holy Grail Tapestries
Christine Poulson
9 ‘The Beautiful Book That Was’: William Morris and the Gift of A Book of Verse
Rosie Miles
10 William Morris in New England: Architecture and Design in Late Nineteenth-Century Rhode Island
Pedro Beade
11 William Morris and Nineteenth-Century Boston
Lindsay Leard-Coolidge
12 ‘Every Artist would be a Workman, and Every Workman an Artist’: Morrisian and Arts and Crafts Ideas and Ideals at the Ontario Educational Association 1900-1920
E. Lisa Panayotidis-Stortz
13 The Dilemma of Place: Arts and Crafts Architecture in the Antipodes
Ian J. Lochhead
Part IV: Morris, Gender and Politics
14 William Morris and Victorian Manliness
Jan Marsh
15 Beyond the Law of the Father: The ‘New Woman’ in News from Nowhere
Ady Mineo
16 Lady Griselda’s Dream: May Morris’s Forgotten Play
Janis Londraville
17 Morris, Anit-Statism and Anarchy
Ruth Kinna
18 E. P. Thompson and William Morris
David Goodway
Notes to Chapters
Paper and Lectures delivered at the William Morris Centenary Conference
Contributors
Postscript: The Work of the William Morris Society
Index
Recenzii
“The essays have two main foci: the revaluation of Morris in the context of his own time, and the revaluation of his legacy. The strength of the book as a whole is that it answers to those two concerns admirably well. The editors risked analytical depth in deciding to print so many (eighteen) essays touching not just on, say, Morris’s literary accomplishments, but also on his work as a designer, as a politician, and as a businessman. But here too, the book succeeds, because nearly all of the essays are grounded by one overarching issue: Morris’s own relationship to history. These pieces are concerned not only with his interest in the past, but also with his vigorous engagement with his historical present.” –Utopian Studies, 30 June 2000
“This is a challenging volume of essays which will no doubt further encourage Morrisian studies as we approach the new millennium. The editors, and the University of Exeter Press, are to be congratulated for producing such a fitting tribute to one of the greatest men of the Victorian age.” –Journal of the William Morris Society, Volume XIII, Number 3 Autumn 1999
“William Morris: Centenary Essays should be regarded by Morrisian scholars as an essential source, now and for many years to come. The scope, variety and mostly high-sometimes outstanding-quality of the essays make it worthy of wider attention too. Expertly edited and attractively produced, moreover, the actual book truly befits its subject. Peter Faulkner, Peter Preston and the University of Exeter Press deserve congratulations and thanks.” –The David Jones Journal, 1999