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OverviewIn Victorian Britain, authors produced a luminous and influential body of writings about the visual arts. From John Ruskin's five-volume celebration of J. M.W. Turner to Walter Pater's essays on the Italian Renaissance, Victorian writers disseminated a new idea in the nineteenth century, that art spectatorship could provide one of the most intense and meaningful forms of human experience. In The Literate Eye, Rachel Teukolsky analyzes the vivid archive of Victorian art writing to reveal the key role played by nineteenth-century authors in the rise of modernist aesthetics. Though traditional accounts locate a break between Victorian values and the experimental styles of the twentieth century, Teukolsky traces how certain art writers promoted a formalism that would come to dominate canons of twentieth-century art. Well-known texts by Ruskin, Pater, and Wilde appear alongside lesser-known texts drawn from the rich field of Victorian print culture, including gallery reviews, scientific treatises, satirical cartoons, and tracts on early photography. Spanning the years 1840 to 1910, her argument lends a new understanding to the transition from Victorianism to modernism, a period of especially lively exchange between artists and intellectuals, here narrated with careful attention to the historical particularities and real events that informed British aesthetic values. Lavishly illustrated and marked by meticulous research, The Literate Eye offers an eloquent argument for the influence of Victorian art culture on the museum worlds of modernism, in a revisionary account that ultimately relocates the notion of ""the modern"" to the heart of the nineteenth century. Full Product DetailsAuthor: TeukolskyPublisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 24.20cm Weight: 0.618kg ISBN: 9780195381375ISBN 10: 0195381378 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 23 July 2009 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() Table of ContentsAcknowledgment INTRODUCTION Victorian Aesthetics CHAPTER ONE Picturesque Signs, Picturing Science: Ruskin in the 1840s CHAPTER TWO Sublime Museum: Scripting Fine Arts at the Great Exhibition CHAPTER THREE Pater's New Republics: Aesthetic Criticism and the Victorian Avant-Garde CHAPTER FOUR Socialist Design at the Fin de Siècle: Biology, Beauty, Utopia CHAPTER FIVE Primitives and Post-Impressionists: Roger Fry's Anthropological Modernism CONCLUSION Art Writing after the VictoriansReviews<br> No society in modern history, surely, has accorded art criticism a larger public role than Victorian Britain. The Literate Eye illuminates the consequences of this distinctive presence through a series of dazzling readings in literature, popular science, period debates, and other forms. Teukolsky's is an absolutely brilliant book, a must-read for students of nineteenth-century culture and its legacies. -Douglas Mao, Johns Hopkins University<br> Rachel Teukolsky's innovative study reveals the richness and complexity of Victorian art writing. In an important move, The Literate Eye brings exhibitionary practices within the purview of aesthetic theory, alongside a spectrum of critical and literary texts. In Teukolsky's historical-rather than teleological-account, formalism emerges as a strand within Victorian thinking, rather than its avenging other. This book should be read by all historians of nineteenth-century art-especially those who idly accept modernism's view of Victorian aest Author InformationRachel Teukolsky is assistant professor of English at Vanderbilt University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |