One of the most powerful stories of the Arts and Crafts movement: a
perceptive biography of one woman's valiant life in a vanished era
of emerging feminism and bold socialist thought.
C. R. Ashbee was, some would say, the key man in the British
Arts and Crafts movement during the early decades of the twentieth
century. Regarded as heir to William Morris in political belief and
design reform, Ashbee (and his Guild of Handicraft) gained
international fame in his own time and remains a legend today.
While much has been written about him, little has been said of his
wife. Now Felicity Ashbee breaks the silence in a compelling book
about her mother.
The book depicts Janet Ashbee as a gifted woman of emotional
warmth, strength, and unconventionality, all of which enhanced her
husband's work. An accomplished writer and thinker in her own
right, Janet Ashbee's life revolved around great historic issues
that still resonate today: the socially conscious Arts and Crafts
movement, the role of women in contemporary affairs, and embattled
ethnic relationships in the Middle East -- not to mention marriage
and sexual orientation, predicated upon her husband's vibrant and
well-known homosexuality.
A book of rare insight and significance, Janet Ashbee sheds
welcome light on the Arts and Crafts movement and on women in
oft-romanticized Victorian and Edwardian British culture.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!