<p>'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 </p><p>’... 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 Year’s Work in Critical and Cultural Theory </p><p>’... 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</p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
John E. Law is Reader in the Department of History at the Swansea University, UK.
Dr Lene Østermark-Johansen lectures on Victorian art and literature in the Department of English at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.