BIROn - Birkbeck Institutional Research Online

    British Decadence and Renaissance Italy

    Fraser, Hilary (2020) British Decadence and Renaissance Italy. In: Murray, A. (ed.) Decadence: A Literary History. Cambridge University Press, pp. 47-64. ISBN 9781108426299.

    [img]
    Preview
    Text
    Hilary Fraser - British Decadence and Renaissance Italy FINAL.pdf - Author's Accepted Manuscript

    Download (235kB) | Preview
    [img] Image
    Rossetti, Lucrezia Borgia, Fig 1.JPG
    Restricted to Repository staff only

    Download (9MB)
    [img] Image
    1791359.tif
    Restricted to Repository staff only

    Download (133MB)
    [img] Image
    3106 6.jpg
    Restricted to Repository staff only

    Download (2MB)
    [img] Image
    3107 3.jpg
    Restricted to Repository staff only

    Download (2MB)
    [img] Image
    h_50005791.jpg
    Restricted to Repository staff only

    Download (5MB)

    Abstract

    Walter Pater’s Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873) was a foundational text for British Decadence. John Ruskin had vilified Renaissance Italy for its moral and aesthetic depravity, but for Pater and his followers the works of artists such as Botticelli, Michelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci became vehicles for a radical aesthetic that elevated intensity of experience as the goal of life and saw art as the most crystalized form of that experience. The Renaissance offered sensual enjoyment that could transform and re-enchant the experience of modernity. This chapter argues that it was the aesthetic and moral ambiguousness of the Renaissance that appealed to the Decadent imagination – its audacious blurring of the boundaries between good and evil, the spiritual and the carnal, beauty and ugliness, legitimate and illicit pleasures; its radical unsettling of conventional demarcations of gender, sexuality, place and historical period. For Decadent writers and artists such ambiguities were intellectually and personally liberating. Renaissance Italy provided a creative space in which to explore contemporary uncertainties and to mobilize a distinctively Decadent style.

    Metadata

    Item Type: Book Section
    School: Birkbeck Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > School of Creative Arts, Culture and Communication
    Research Centres and Institutes: Nineteenth-Century Studies, Centre for
    Depositing User: Hilary Fraser
    Date Deposited: 20 Jan 2021 11:32
    Last Modified: 09 Aug 2023 12:45
    URI: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/26222

    Statistics

    Activity Overview
    6 month trend
    176Downloads
    6 month trend
    89Hits

    Additional statistics are available via IRStats2.

    Archive Staff Only (login required)

    Edit/View Item Edit/View Item