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Although John Ruskin is widely considered to have produced some of the greatest prose in English, there has been no extended study of how he learned to write or of the language with which he represents his learning. This book begins with the prodigiously inventive child who looks ahead to what he will achieve, and ends with the adult who looks to his past for proof that he has never been inventive.
Far from a simple about-face, Ruskin's self-denial is a culmination and extension of the art that he mastered in youth, and it is one of the most remarkable acts of self-representation in all of Victorian prose. Drawing on Ruskin's own sources as well as on recent directions in critical theory, Professor Emerson reveals the effects of early literary, familial, sexual, and social experiences on the shaping of a major writer's identity
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1
Ruskin: The Genesis of Invention
2010, University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations
in English
0521128676 9780521128674
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2
Ruskin: The Genesis of Invention
January 28, 1994, Cambridge University Press
Hardcover
in English
0521418070 9780521418072
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3
Ruskin: the genesis of invention
1993, Cambridge University Press
in English
0521418070 9780521418072
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