000 01657 a2200301 4500
001 1317532791
005 20250317111635.0
008 250312042015GB eng
020 _a9781317532798
037 _bTaylor & Francis
_cGBP 25.99
_fBB
040 _a01
041 _aeng
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072 7 _aSOC052000
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072 7 _a828.809
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100 1 _aGeorge P. Landow
245 1 0 _aRuskin (Routledge Revivals)
250 _a1
260 _aOxford
_bRoutledge
_c20150611
300 _a110 p
520 _bRuskin, the great Victorian critics of art and society, had an enormous influence on his age and our own. A highly successful propagandist for the arts, he did much both to popularize high art and to bring it to the masses. A brilliant theorist and practical critics of realism, he also produced the finest nineteenth-century discussions of fantasy, the grotesque, and pictorial symbolism. Most who have written about this outstanding Victorian polymath have approached him either as literary critics or as art historians. In this book, which was first published in 1985, George P. Landow provides a more balanced view and offers a strikingly new approach which reveals that Ruskin wrote throughout his career as an interpreter, an exegete. His interpretations covered many fields of human experience and endeavour, not only paintings, poems, and buildings but also contemporary social issues, such as the discontent of the working classes.
999 _c7064
_d7064