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Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance John E. Law

Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance By John E. Law

Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance by John E. Law


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Summary

Explores the responses stimulated by the encounter between the British, the Americans and the Italians of the Renaissance. This volume approaches the subject from an interdisciplinary perspective. It seeks to draw attention to many of whom led colourful lives, knew Italy well, and wrote eloquently about the country and its Renaissance.

Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance Summary

Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance by John E. Law

The historiography of the Italian Renaissance has been much studied, but generally in the context of a few key figures. Much less appreciated is the extent of the enthusiasm for the subject in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when the subject was 'discovered' by travellers and men and women of letters, historians, artists, architects and photographers, and by collectors on both sides of the Atlantic. The essays in Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance explore the breadth of the responses stimulated by the encounter between the British, the Americans and the Italians of the Renaissance. The volume approaches the subject from an interdisciplinary perspective. While recognising the abiding importance of the familiar 'great names', it seeks to draw attention to a wider cast of people, many of whom led colourful, energetic lives, knew Italy well, and wrote eloquently about the country and its Renaissance. Several essays show that 'Renaissance studies' became a field in which female historians could explore areas of relevance to the 'New Woman'. Other chapters examine the aims and politics of collecting and the place of the collector in literature and in the rediscovery of Renaissance artists. The contribution of teachers and other less formal champions of the Italian Renaissance is explored, as is the role of photographers who re-framed and re-viewed Florence - the Renaissance city - for Victorian and later eyes.

Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance Reviews

'It successfully argues for the enduring influence of the late-Victorian period in shaping our own canons of the art and mentality of the Italian renaissance, and it makes a convincing case for redressing the ingrained modernist bias in twentieth-century art criticism against the prolific work of writers such as Ruskin, Pater, Symonds, and Lee, which is still often dismissed as amateurish, "purple", and unscholarly.' Victorian Studies

... it is a cogent and wide-ranging collection that develops our understanding of the ways in which the idea of the Renaissance was invented in the nineteenth century. The Years Work in Critical and Cultural Theory

... by adopting a methodology that embraces biography, politics, economic history, material culture, feminism, and curricular developments in higher education, it makes a significant contribution to Italian Renaissance scholarship... Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance is an academic "must read" not only for those with a particular interest in this time period, but also for graduate students who are being introduced to methodology. This volume is an excellent example of how to direct a scholar's attention to the importance of archival research and historiography. Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide

About John E. Law

John E. Law is Reader in the Department of History at the Swansea University, UK.

Dr Lene stermark-Johansen lectures on Victorian art and literature in the Department of English at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Table of Contents

Contents: Foreword, Paul Barolsky; Introduction, Lene Astermark-Johansen; Florence, photography and the Victorians, Graham Smith; 'Let agents be sent to all the cities of Italy': British public museums and the Italian art market in the mid-19th century, Donata Levi; The art of Alessandro Botticelli through the eyes of Victorian aesthetes, Adrian S. Hoch; On the motion of great waters: Walter Pater, Leonardo and Heraclitus, Lene Astermark-Johansen; Renaissance fin de siecle: models of patronage and patterns of taste in American press and fiction (1880-1914), Flaminia Gennari Santori; Illustrating Lorenzo the Magnificent: from William Roscoe's The Life of Lorenzo de' Medici called the Magnificent (1795) to George Frederic Watts's fresco at Careggi (1845), Katerine Gaja; John Addington Symonds and the despots of Renaissance Italy, John Easton Law; Writing a female Renaissance: Victorian women and the past, Hilary Fraser; Vernon Lee and the Renaissance: from Burckhardt to Berenson, Alison Brown; Edward Armstrong (1846-1928), teacher of the Italian Renaissance at Oxford, D.S. Chambers; Cecilia M. Ady: the Edwardian education of a historian of Renaissance Italy, Benjamin G. Kohl; L. Arthur Burd, Lord Acton, and Machiavelli, Russell Price; Medieval and Renaissance Siena and Tuscany c.1900: civic life, religion and the countryside, Edward D. English; Index.

Additional information

NPB9780754650577
9780754650577
075465057X
Victorian and Edwardian Responses to the Italian Renaissance by John E. Law
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2005-11-23
322
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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