Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1080/01440350801939526
DC FieldValue
dc.titleRuskin's rewriting of Darwin
dc.contributor.authorLeng, A.
dc.date.accessioned2014-12-02T08:59:27Z
dc.date.available2014-12-02T08:59:27Z
dc.date.issued2008
dc.identifier.citationLeng, A. (2008). Ruskin's rewriting of Darwin. Prose Studies 30 (1) : 64-90. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1080/01440350801939526
dc.identifier.issn17439426
dc.identifier.urihttp://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/114720
dc.description.abstractThis article presents an important discovery: "Modern Painters 5" (1860) is a sustained - though coded - rewriting of "The Origin of Species" (1859). Because it is thus the first book to confront Darwin's paradigm shift, we must radically rethink our understanding of it, and of the ready manner in which Victorian culture assimilated Darwinism. For Ruskin's sage prose mediates the reception of Darwin's famously literary science text in the Victorian periodical press and fiction, both generically and chronologically. "Modern Painters 5" covertly subverts "The Origin" by elaborating an alternative account of "the origin of wood" that targets Darwin's profane, presiding "great tree" image for Natural Selection both verbally and pictorially. But the book concludes with a paleontological apocalypse which dramatizes the triumph of the protean dragon - a Satanic type of the dinosaurs that had recently been resurrected at nearby Crystal Palace park. This article suggests why Ruskin's momentous rewriting of "The Origin" - which was a catalyst for his contemporaneous assault on political economy in "Unto This Last" - has hitherto gone unnoticed!
dc.description.urihttp://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01440350801939526
dc.sourceScopus
dc.subjectApocalypse
dc.subjectCrystal Palace
dc.subjectDinosaur
dc.subjectDragon
dc.subjectJ. M. W. Turner
dc.subjectNatural selection
dc.subjectNatural theology
dc.subjectPaleontology
dc.subjectPolitical economy
dc.subjectSage prose
dc.subjectTree symbolism
dc.typeArticle
dc.contributor.departmentUNIVERSITY SCHOLARS PROGRAMME
dc.description.doi10.1080/01440350801939526
dc.description.sourcetitleProse Studies
dc.description.volume30
dc.description.issue1
dc.description.page64-90
dc.identifier.isiut000211482500004
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