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William Morris and Medieval Material Culture
William Morris and Medieval Material Culture
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106,60 €
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152,29 €
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William Morris was renowned for the medievalism of his work in decorative arts, poetry, romances, and printing, and for his socialist politics. In this richly detailed study, Yuri Cowan shows that Morris was drawn not to the monuments of medievalist high culture but to texts, manuscripts, incunables, and artifacts that represented the everyday life of ordinary medieval people, exploring how these shaped the political, imaginative, and historiographical dimensions of Morris’s own work and legacy…

William Morris and Medieval Material Culture (el. knyga) (skaityta knyga) | knygos.lt

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William Morris was renowned for the medievalism of his work in decorative arts, poetry, romances, and printing, and for his socialist politics. In this richly detailed study, Yuri Cowan shows that Morris was drawn not to the monuments of medievalist high culture but to texts, manuscripts, incunables, and artifacts that represented the everyday life of ordinary medieval people, exploring how these shaped the political, imaginative, and historiographical dimensions of Morris’s own work and legacy.

The surviving artifacts of medieval material culture that appear throughout Morris’s writings are strikingly diverse: tapestries, carpets, garments, cups, candles, barns, and – most significantly – books. This work, the first to examine closely the early printed books and medieval manuscripts in Morris’s personal library, reveals how these texts shaped his conception of the past. Viewed from a historiographical rather than purely aesthetic standpoint, Morris’s medievalism emerges not as a stylistic preference but as a reorientation of perspective: geographically, from center to margin; socially, from monumental to domestic; and politically, from exceptional figures to everyday actors. At the same time, Morris remained acutely attentive to the material conditions through which medieval texts and objects were transmitted, since he understood their physical forms – bindings, scripts, wear, and craftsmanship – as historical evidence of the social contexts and labour that produced them.Top of Form

William Morris and Medieval Material Culture opens a vivid window onto how everyday objects and texts shaped the lives and imaginations of people in the past, revealing their influence on art, politics, and the stories we tell about history.

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William Morris was renowned for the medievalism of his work in decorative arts, poetry, romances, and printing, and for his socialist politics. In this richly detailed study, Yuri Cowan shows that Morris was drawn not to the monuments of medievalist high culture but to texts, manuscripts, incunables, and artifacts that represented the everyday life of ordinary medieval people, exploring how these shaped the political, imaginative, and historiographical dimensions of Morris’s own work and legacy.

The surviving artifacts of medieval material culture that appear throughout Morris’s writings are strikingly diverse: tapestries, carpets, garments, cups, candles, barns, and – most significantly – books. This work, the first to examine closely the early printed books and medieval manuscripts in Morris’s personal library, reveals how these texts shaped his conception of the past. Viewed from a historiographical rather than purely aesthetic standpoint, Morris’s medievalism emerges not as a stylistic preference but as a reorientation of perspective: geographically, from center to margin; socially, from monumental to domestic; and politically, from exceptional figures to everyday actors. At the same time, Morris remained acutely attentive to the material conditions through which medieval texts and objects were transmitted, since he understood their physical forms – bindings, scripts, wear, and craftsmanship – as historical evidence of the social contexts and labour that produced them.Top of Form

William Morris and Medieval Material Culture opens a vivid window onto how everyday objects and texts shaped the lives and imaginations of people in the past, revealing their influence on art, politics, and the stories we tell about history.

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