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Performing the Victorian
Sharon Aronofsky Weltman
其他書名
John Ruskin and Identity in Theater, Science, and Education
出版
Ohio State University Press
, 2007
主題
Art / Criticism & Theory
Literary Criticism / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / General
Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / Women
Psychology / Social Psychology
ISBN
0814210554
9780814210550
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=qe5JsMVh0yMC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Performing the Victorian: John Ruskin and Identity in Theater, Science, and Education
by Sharon Aronofsky Weltman is the first book to examine Ruskin's writing on theater. In works as celebrated as
Modern Painters
and obscure as
Love's Meinie
, Ruskin uses his voracious attendance at the theater to illustrate points about social justice, aesthetic practice, and epistemology. Opera, Shakespeare, pantomime, French comedies, juggling acts, and dance prompt his fascination with performed identities that cross boundaries of gender, race, nation, and species. These theatrical examples also reveal the primacy of performance to his understanding of science and education. In addition to Ruskin on theater,
Performing the Victorian
interprets recent theater portraying Ruskin (
The Invention of Love, The Countess
, the opera
Modern Painters
) as merely a Victorian prude or pedophile against which contemporary culture defines itself. These theatrical depictions may be compared to concurrent plays about Ruskin's friend and student Oscar Wilde (
Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde
,
The Judas Kiss
). Like Ruskin, Wilde is misrepresented on the fin-de-millennial stage, in his case anachronistically as an icon of homosexual identity. These recent characterizations offer a set of static identity labels that constrain contemporary audiences more rigidly than the mercurial selves conjured in the prose of either Ruskin or Wilde.