Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface to a History in the Manner of an Essay
- Part I Forming the British Essay
- Part II The Great Age of the British Essay
- Part III Assaying Culture, Education, Reform
- Part IV Fractured Selves, Fragmented Worlds
- Part V The Essay and the Essayistic Today
- 39 The Eye and the I: Essay and Image
- 40 Of Human Suffering: The Essay and Ekphrasis
- 41 After Empire: Postcolonialism and the Essay
- 42 Performance and the Irish Essay
- 43 The Essay and the Public Intellectual
- 44 Essayism in Literary Theory
- 45 The Essay in the Career of the Contemporary British Novelist
- 46 Blogging in Britain: Essays in the Digital Age
- 47 The Essay, Ecocriticism, and the Anthropocene
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
39 - The Eye and the I: Essay and Image
from Part V - The Essay and the Essayistic Today
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 October 2024
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface to a History in the Manner of an Essay
- Part I Forming the British Essay
- Part II The Great Age of the British Essay
- Part III Assaying Culture, Education, Reform
- Part IV Fractured Selves, Fragmented Worlds
- Part V The Essay and the Essayistic Today
- 39 The Eye and the I: Essay and Image
- 40 Of Human Suffering: The Essay and Ekphrasis
- 41 After Empire: Postcolonialism and the Essay
- 42 Performance and the Irish Essay
- 43 The Essay and the Public Intellectual
- 44 Essayism in Literary Theory
- 45 The Essay in the Career of the Contemporary British Novelist
- 46 Blogging in Britain: Essays in the Digital Age
- 47 The Essay, Ecocriticism, and the Anthropocene
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter traces the history of essay writing about art in Britain from the early nineteenth century to the present day. Developing out of eighteenth-century periodical essays, a more individualistic approach to art writing begins with Romantic essayists like William Hazlitt. For John Ruskin, the essay offered a means to connect his personal responses to the visual arts with a larger project of social and moral reform, while for his aestheticist successors, it enabled an exploration of the affective dimensions of those responses. For modernist writers like Virginia Woolf, Samuel Beckett, Wyndham Lewis, or D.H. Lawrence, faced with the institutionalisation of art history, the art essay offered a testing ground for questioning assumptions about medium specificity or experimentation that animated their fiction. For contemporary writers from John Berger to W.G. Sebald, the proximity of the art essay to life writing has enabled the blurring of boundaries between essay, fiction, and autobiography.
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- The Cambridge History of the British Essay , pp. 587 - 600Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024