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Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

 

John Ruskin and the Modern World: Art and Economics 1860-2010

Date: 6 February 2010 Time: 10.30 am - 4.00 pm

Venue: The Art Workers Guild, London

Ruskin Symposium 2010
Ruskin Symposium 2010

The Ruskin Library and Research Centre (Lancaster University) and the Guild of St George

announce

John Ruskin and the Modern World: Art and Economics 1860-2010

A Symposium at

The Art Workers Guild, 6 Queen Square, Bloomsbury, London WC1N 3AT (Nearest tube Holborn or Russell Sq)

10.30 a.m. - 4.00 p.m., Saturday 6 February 2010

Can there be an ethical economics?

Our economic system is in trouble. The recent credit crunch has been the worst disaster to hit capitalism since the Wall Street Crash and the Great Depression. As the critics and commentators survey the wreckage, the name John Ruskin has several times come to their lips. Not Ruskin as art critic or the master of purple prose, but Ruskin as political economist.

The year 2010 witnesses a double 150th anniversary for students and followers of Ruskin. 1860 saw the publication of the final volume of Modern Painters, the book in which Ruskin had championed J.M.W. Turner as the supreme interpreter of nature and humanity. It also saw a radical change of direction in his work with the serialization of his 'Four Essays on Political Economy'. Unto This Last, as the essays came to be called, is the fiercest and most cogent of all Victorian attacks on laissez-faire capitalism. It is that book and the writings that follow from it that have been in the minds of recent commentators amid their talk of 'ethical capitalism'.

The Ruskin Library and Research Centre at Lancaster is combining with Ruskin's charity the Guild of St George to bring this debate into public focus and stimulate interest outside the University. There will be addresses from a headline external speaker, from an academic political economist, and from an expert on Ruskin's economics. There will also be a panel discussion, including leading journalists, and participation from the audience.

For further detailsplease click here

For a booking form please click here

To download a poster please click here

Contact:

Who can attend: Anyone

 

Further information

Associated staff: Lauren Kenwright, Christopher May (Politics, Philosophy and Religion PPR), Andrew Tate, Stephen Wildman

Organising departments and research centres: Ruskin Research Centre

Keywords: Economic history, Ethics, Nineteenth century, Political economy, Political ideologies, Politics, Ruskin, Twentieth century, Twenty-first century

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