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Poetry in Pre-Raphaelite Paintings is an international collection
of essays written by seasoned and emerging scholars. This book
explores, discusses, and provides new perspectives on
Pre-Raphaelite paintings inspired by poems and poems inspired by
Pre-Raphaelite paintings, ranging from the inauguration of the
movement in 1848 until the end of the nineteenth century. Through a
textual and visual journey, this work reflects an innovative
approach to Pre-Raphaelite art and Victorian poetry. The rationale
in collating this collection of essays is to suggest new approaches
for studies in Victorian visual and verbal art. This collection
urges new ways of looking at Pre-Raphaelite art and poetry and its
dynamic impact on the changing face of Victorian artistic practices
through the second half of the nineteenth century, re-evaluating
the extent to which this relatively short-lived movement influenced
diverse writers and artists and their work. This book will be of
interest to students and scholars of Pre-Raphaelites, Victorian
poetry and painting, and the intersection between them.
A revolutionary figure throughout his career, Dante Gabriel
Rossetti's work provides a distinctly revolutionary lens through
which the Victorian period can be viewed. Suggesting that
Rossetti's work should be approached through his poetry, Brian
Donnelly argues that it is both inscribed by and inscribes the
development of verbal as well as visual culture in the Victorian
era. In his discussions of modernity, aestheticism, and material
culture, he identifies Rossetti as a central figure who helped
define the terms through which we approach the cultural productions
of this period. Donnelly begins by articulating a method for
reading Rossetti's poetry that highlights the intertextual
relations within and between the poetry and paintings. His
interpretations of such poems as the 'Mary's Girlhood' sonnets, the
sonnet sequence The House of Life, and 'The Orchard-Pit' in
relationship to paintings such as The Girlhood of Mary Virgin and
Ecce Ancilla Domini! shed light on Victorian ideals of femininity,
on consumer culture, and on the role of gender hierarchies in
Victorian culture. Situating Rossetti's poetry as the key to all of
his work, Donnelly also makes a case for its centrality in its
representation of the dominant discourses of the late Victorian
period: faith, sex, consumption, death, and the nature of
representation itself.
Paul Tillich never abandoned the Marxist ideas he developed during
the political upheaval of his native Germany in the 1920s and
1930s. Indeed, he subsumed and incorporated Marxism into the
construction of his post-German religious thinking and theology
which he pioneered after fleeing to the USA in 1933. In the
"Socialist Emigre, Brian Donnelly deals with the philosophical
foundations of Tillich's theology, specifically the important
thread of Marxism, and argues that Tillich's later and highly
acclaimed theology cannot be divorced from his earlier Marxist
views. This makes for a seminal work which examines Tillich in a
new and critical light and furthers the debate as to the structure
of his philosophical theology and the nature of his eclectic
thought. This unique study features Tillich's boundary thought
regarding Marxism and religion, faith and culture, history and
supernaturalism, and emphasizes Tillich the philosopher rather then
Tillich the theologian.
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