The Works of John Ruskin ...: Praeterita. 1886-87
Author: John Ruskin
Publisher:
Published: 1887
Total Pages: 464
ISBN-13:
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Author: John Ruskin
Publisher:
Published: 1887
Total Pages: 464
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: John Ruskin
Publisher:
Published: 1908
Total Pages: 924
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKVolume 1-35, works. Volume 36-37, letters. Volume 38 provides an extensive bibliography of Ruskin's writings and a catalogue of his drawings, with corrections to earlier volumes in George Allen's Library Edition of the Works of John Ruskin. Volume 39, general index.
Author: John Ruskin
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 2012-05-10
Total Pages: 481
ISBN-13: 0192802410
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPraeterita is the autobiography of John Ruskin (1819-1900), art critic and social commentator and one of the most influential figures of the nineteenth century. An elegy for lost places and people, Praeterita recounts Ruskin's childhood, and his travels across Europe with passion and intimacy.
Author: Ruskin John Ruskin
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Published: 2019-08-07
Total Pages: 624
ISBN-13: 1474472230
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPraeterita is perhaps the best-loved of all the fruits of Ruskin's many-sided and tormented genius. This exceptional biography - the first of Ruskin's works in the Whitehouse edition - simultaneously presents a deeply reflective portrait of an early 19th-century Protestant family - its genuine piety, its severities, its suffocating possessive affections - and the product (at once intellectually brilliant and emotionally damaged) of its educational system.
Author: John Rylands Library
Publisher:
Published: 1899
Total Pages: 664
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Robert Douglas-Fairhurst
Publisher: Belknap Press
Published: 2016-08-15
Total Pages: 497
ISBN-13: 0674970764
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFollowing his acclaimed life of Dickens, Robert Douglas-Fairhurst illuminates the tangled history of two lives and two books. Drawing on numerous unpublished sources, he examines in detail the peculiar friendship between the Oxford mathematician Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) and Alice Liddell, the child for whom he invented the Alice stories, and analyzes how this relationship stirred Carroll’s imagination and influenced the creation of Wonderland. It also explains why Alice in Wonderland (1865) and its sequel, Through the Looking-Glass (1871), took on an unstoppable cultural momentum in the Victorian era and why, a century and a half later, they continue to enthrall and delight readers of all ages. The Story of Alice reveals Carroll as both an innovator and a stodgy traditionalist, entrenched in habits and routines. He had a keen double interest in keeping things moving and keeping them just as they are. (In Looking-Glass Land, Alice must run faster and faster just to stay in one place.) Tracing the development of the Alice books from their inception in 1862 to Liddell’s death in 1934, Douglas-Fairhurst also provides a keyhole through which to observe a larger, shifting cultural landscape: the birth of photography, changing definitions of childhood, murky questions about sex and sexuality, and the relationship between Carroll’s books and other works of Victorian literature. In the stormy transition from the Victorian to the modern era, Douglas-Fairhurst shows, Wonderland became a sheltered world apart, where the line between the actual and the possible was continually blurred.
Author: Bernard Buchanan MacGeorge
Publisher:
Published: 1892
Total Pages: 196
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Frederick Wilse Bateson
Publisher: CUP Archive
Published: 1940
Total Pages: 1132
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Hadas Elber-Aviram
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 2021-01-28
Total Pages: 194
ISBN-13: 1350110698
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFinalist for the 2022 Mythopoeic Scholarship Award for Myth and Fantasy Studies From the time of Charles Dickens, the imaginative power of the city of London has frequently inspired writers to their most creative flights of fantasy. Charting a new history of London fantasy writing from the Victorian era to the 21st century, Fairy Tales of London explores a powerful tradition of urban fantasy distinct from the rural tales of writers such as J.R.R. Tolkien. Hadas Elber-Aviram traces this urban tradition from Dickens, through the scientific romances of H.G. Wells, the anti-fantasies of George Orwell and Mervyn Peake to contemporary science fiction and fantasy writers such as Michael Moorcock, Neil Gaiman and China Miéville.
Author: John Rylands Library
Publisher:
Published: 1899
Total Pages: 664
ISBN-13:
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