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59 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rosenberg's Edition of Ruskin Remains Unchallenged,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Genius of John Ruskin: Selections from His Writings (Victorian Literature and Culture Series) (Paperback)
It is a great pity that the works of Ruskin are neither widely read nor widely available. One can only hope that the day will come when an affordable, comprehensive, multi-volume collection will become available. For now, we may be thankful for the work of Columbia University's John Rosenberg, who has given us perhaps as fine an introduction to Ruskin as can be hoped for. The selections are long and judiciously made, and they address Ruskin in all important aspects of his work: art critic, social heretic, autobiographer. This book is like a wise old friend, especially comforting in a world that has in so many ways departed from the values that this volume enshrines. A faithful rendering of an indispensable author.
37 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfection of Seeing, Being, and Creating...,
This review is from: The Genius of John Ruskin: Selections from His Writings (Victorian Literature and Culture Series) (Paperback)
One can hardly read any thoughtful analysis orevaluation of art, artists, even poets, without coming upon a quote from John Ruskin. Yet one may read the quote, realize its acuteness, but then proceed on -- without really knowing anything about John Ruskin himself, or about his ideas and works. That is a tragic loss. Ruskin was an English art critic and scholar, as well as a cultural and philosphical historian who lived from 1819 to 1900. He attended and graduated from Oxford University, and in 1869 was appointed first Slade Professor of Fine Art at Oxford. John Ruskin seems to me to be a combination of Plato, godly Greek sculptors, and Thoreau. His own senses, apparently (just like Thoreau's) were extremely acute...he has incredible sharpness of vision. But even more telling, he has incredible command of vision and the language to express it with. He seems, at times, like a Homer of artistic cultural and philosophical expression. This volume is a compilation of excerpts from Ruskin's major writings: MODERN PAINTERS I, II, III, IV, and V/ THE SEVEN LAMPS OF ARCHITECTURE/ THE STONES OF VENICE/ THE TWO PATHS/ UNTO THIS LAST/ THE CROWN OF WILD OLIVE/ SESAME AND LILIES/ THE QUEEN OF THE AIR/ FORS CLAVIGERA/ FICTION, FAIR AND FOUL/ THE STORM-CLOUD OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY/ and PRAETERITA. There are multiple excerpts from each of these works, and each excerpt is followed by a very helpful citation of the volume, part, section, and chapter of the work where the excerpt is found. Ruskin is not "merely" an acute analyzer and evaluator of art and architecture, but he also is an artistic and ethical philosopher. His philosophy seems to have a strong dose of PAGAN GREEK (Plato) underpinning, which interacts interestingly with the Evangelical Protestantism overlaid when he was young by his mother's strict Bible lessons. His whole life seems to have been a struggle between these two grappling forces, like the statue of "The Wrestlers" from Hellenistic times.
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Classic Anthology,
By Ryuichi (Ayaseshi, Kanagawaken Japan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Genius of John Ruskin: Selections from His Writings (Victorian Literature and Culture Series) (Paperback)
Highly acclaimed anthology of John Ruskin, this book is made out of 39 vols Library Edition of John Ruskin's works, supported by 5 pillars--art, architecture, society, solitude and self and compiled chronologically.In the introduction, Herbert Tucker estimates this book as a classic anthology. It is followed by Rosenberg's preface, and before each section mentioned above is his own explanatory comment. This is extremely superb in style as well as contents. At the end of the book is a new bibliography, to some of which entries brief comments are added. As Ruskin's writings, especially those in early years, are not easy to read, this book is priceless. Among relatively rare entries are "Traffic" in The Clown of Wild Olive, "Athena Keramitis" in Queen of the Air, and "Essay I" in Fiction Fair and Foul. Compared with the previous anthology by Kenneth Clark, "Ruskin Today", this one is inferior in variety but far superior in amount. Now we have the Ruskin's Complete Works in one CD-ROM, but it cannot be read, say, in a train or bed unless printed out. Concisely selected, this book is, I think, quite valuable when kept by your side.
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The Genius of John Ruskin: Selections from His Writings (Victorian Literature and Culture Series) by John Ruskin (Paperback - January 28, 1998)
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