Strangeness and Beauty: Volume 1, Ruskin to Swinburne: An Anthology of Aesthetic Criticism 1840-1910Eric Warner, Graham Hough This is a two-volume anthology of criticism of art and literature from approximately 1840 to 1910. The central purpose of the anthology is to show how Romantic ideas of art and imagination were transformed by a number of writers in the nineteenth century and became the fundamental premisses of modernist aesthetics. Volume 1 begins with the development of the Romantic idea of the artist-critic as preacher in the work of Ruskin, whose aim was very much that of this Romantic forebears, Blake and Wordsworth: to awaken humanity to a greater spiritual perception. The volume also concerns itself with the transformation of this in works such as Arthur Hallam's essay on his friend Tennyson, which is central to the writing of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, and with the development of French Romanticism into the influential aesthetic movement of Symbolism in the work of Gautier and Baudelaire. The volumes comprise general introductions and introduction to individual extracts, full annotation and helpful guides to further reading. |
Contents
Diaphaneitè | 9 |
From The Child in the House | 33 |
Prosper Mérimée | 69 |
GEORGE MOORE 18521933 | 90 |
Degas | 109 |
Whistler | 115 |
OSCAR WILDE 18541900 | 121 |
WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 18651939 | 158 |
ARTHUR SYMONS 18651945 | 210 |
II | 225 |
IV | 259 |
A New Art of the Stage | 265 |
Notes | 273 |
| 300 | |
Other editions - View all
Strangeness and Beauty: Volume 1, Ruskin to Swinburne: An Anthology of ... Eric Warner,Graham Hough No preview available - 1983 |
Strangeness and Beauty: Volume 1, Ruskin to Swinburne: An Anthology of ... Eric Warner,Graham Hough No preview available - 1983 |
Common terms and phrases
abstract aesthetic ancient Arthur Symons artist Baudelaire beautiful things become believe Blake called cave charm Coleridge colour consciousness criticism curious Dante Dante Gabriel Rossetti Decadent Movement Degas delight divine dream elements emotion England English essay eternal expression exquisite eyes flowers French Gautier genius Gérard de Nerval Giorgione Greek human ideal ideas images imaginative impression influence instinct intellectual Les Fêtes Galantes light Lionel Johnson literary literature live Marius the Epicurean matter means mind modern moral mystic nature never nineteenth century Oscar Wilde painter painting passion Pater perfect perhaps philosophy picture poem poet poetic poetry Pre-Raphaelites prose realised reality religion Renaissance romantic romanticism Rossetti Ruskin seems sense Shelley soul spirit strange style subtle symbols Symons Symons's thought tion true truth Verlaine verse Victor Hugo vision Walter Pater Whistler Wilde William Blake words Wordsworth write Yeats Yeats's



