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42 — John Ruskin — Rock Lover

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Sinopsis

John Ruskin’s ‘Stones of Venice’ is one of the monuments of architectural theory in the 19th century. But it’s a hard book to get through, or to get inside. It’s incredibly long, and animated by a kind of moralistic passion that feels a little alien, at best quaint, or childish. Part of the reason is that Ruskin was a Victorian — indeed, one of the great formers of Victorian taste. We were planning to talk about the first part of the book, but in the end we just spent the whole episode trying to get to grips with what that means. Why was he like this? We’ll read the first two parts in the next episode. Thanks for being patient! As usual we got a couple of things wrong — Little Nell is actually in ‘The Old Curiosity Shop’. Also the number of volumes of ‘modern painters’ isn’t five — there are 7, actually — though often sold as five volumes. Music —  Tita Ruffo ‘Visione Veneziana’ Audio includes — the following site recordings from the Radio Aporee project on archive.org Ksamil, Albanie - Midnight wav