Description

Book Synopsis

A wide-ranging collection of essays written for the William Morris Society exploring the various intersections between the life, work and achievements of William Morris (1834-1896) and that of John Ruskin (1819-1900).
Subjects covered include Ruskin’s connection with the Pre-Raphaelite movement, the promotion of craft skills and meaningful work, Morris and the division of labour, Ruskin’s engagement with education and the environment, Ruskin and the art and architecture of Red House, the parallels between Ruskin’s support for Laxey Mill and Morris’s Merton Abbey Works, the illustrated manuscript and the contrasts between Ruskin’s Tory paternalism and Morris’s revolutionary socialism. The book includes articles first published in The Journal of William Morris Studies between 1977 and 2012 and new pieces written especially for this volume.
Ruskin's beliefs had a profound and lasting impact on Morris who wrote, upon first reading Ruskin whilst at Oxford University, that his views offered a "new road on which the world should travel" - a road that led Morris to social and political change.



Trade Review

This is a book to be considered carefully, then, for its multiple ways of approaching these two men and their works.There are no attempts to force a synergy between the two where none exists; differences are fully acknowledged and fruitfully explored, while similarities are teased out, considered from all angles and used to shed a light on these ‘eminent Victorians’.

-- Serena Trowbridge * Pre-Raphaelite Society Review *

Table of Contents

The William Morris Society
Notes on Contributors

1 Introduction - John Blewitt

2 Ruskin and Morris - Peter Faulkner

3 John Ruskin: patron or patriarch? - Robert Brownell

4 ‘“This link between the Earth and Man”: Ruskin, Morris, and Education’ -
Sara Atwood

5 Red House and Ruskin - Jacques Migeon

6 Morris and Pre-Raphaelitism - Peter Faulkner

7 Ruskin and Fairfax Murray - David Elliot

8 John Ruskin, William Morris and the Illuminated Manuscript - Evelyn J. Phimister

9 Medievalism in Morris’s Aesthetic Theory - Michael Naslas

10 ‘Bawling the right road’: Morris and Ruskinian social criticism - Chris Brooks

11 From Art to Politics: John Ruskin and William Morris - Lawrence Goldman

12 Laxley Mill: Ruskin’s Parallel to Merton Abbey - David Faldet

13 William Morris and the Division of Labour: the idea of work in News from Nowhere - Christopher Shaw

14 John Ruskin’s Tory Paternalism - John Blewitt

Index

William Morris and John Ruskin: A New Road on

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    A Paperback / softback by John Blewitt

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      View other formats and editions of William Morris and John Ruskin: A New Road on by John Blewitt

      Publisher: University of Exeter Press
      Publication Date: 19/06/2019
      ISBN13: 9781905816347, 978-1905816347
      ISBN10: 1905816340

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A wide-ranging collection of essays written for the William Morris Society exploring the various intersections between the life, work and achievements of William Morris (1834-1896) and that of John Ruskin (1819-1900).
      Subjects covered include Ruskin’s connection with the Pre-Raphaelite movement, the promotion of craft skills and meaningful work, Morris and the division of labour, Ruskin’s engagement with education and the environment, Ruskin and the art and architecture of Red House, the parallels between Ruskin’s support for Laxey Mill and Morris’s Merton Abbey Works, the illustrated manuscript and the contrasts between Ruskin’s Tory paternalism and Morris’s revolutionary socialism. The book includes articles first published in The Journal of William Morris Studies between 1977 and 2012 and new pieces written especially for this volume.
      Ruskin's beliefs had a profound and lasting impact on Morris who wrote, upon first reading Ruskin whilst at Oxford University, that his views offered a "new road on which the world should travel" - a road that led Morris to social and political change.



      Trade Review

      This is a book to be considered carefully, then, for its multiple ways of approaching these two men and their works.There are no attempts to force a synergy between the two where none exists; differences are fully acknowledged and fruitfully explored, while similarities are teased out, considered from all angles and used to shed a light on these ‘eminent Victorians’.

      -- Serena Trowbridge * Pre-Raphaelite Society Review *

      Table of Contents

      The William Morris Society
      Notes on Contributors

      1 Introduction - John Blewitt

      2 Ruskin and Morris - Peter Faulkner

      3 John Ruskin: patron or patriarch? - Robert Brownell

      4 ‘“This link between the Earth and Man”: Ruskin, Morris, and Education’ -
      Sara Atwood

      5 Red House and Ruskin - Jacques Migeon

      6 Morris and Pre-Raphaelitism - Peter Faulkner

      7 Ruskin and Fairfax Murray - David Elliot

      8 John Ruskin, William Morris and the Illuminated Manuscript - Evelyn J. Phimister

      9 Medievalism in Morris’s Aesthetic Theory - Michael Naslas

      10 ‘Bawling the right road’: Morris and Ruskinian social criticism - Chris Brooks

      11 From Art to Politics: John Ruskin and William Morris - Lawrence Goldman

      12 Laxley Mill: Ruskin’s Parallel to Merton Abbey - David Faldet

      13 William Morris and the Division of Labour: the idea of work in News from Nowhere - Christopher Shaw

      14 John Ruskin’s Tory Paternalism - John Blewitt

      Index

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