Conference: "John Ruskin: Prophet of the Anthropocene"

(part of a series)

On February 8, 2019, the 200th anniversary of John Ruskin’s birth, the BBC published a feature asking “Was John Ruskin the most important man of the last 200 years?” The question is entirely warranted. John Ruskin, Victorian art critic turned social commentator, was an early analyst of the damage done to the earth by industrialization, and placed questions of beauty at the heart of all his writings on science, architecture, urban environments, painting, economics, education, and what we now call ecology. 

The conference will engage not just with Ruskin’s writing, but with the very wide impact Ruskin’s ideas continue to have in the world.  Participants include scholars who have studied these projects, and those who continue to be active in them. The conference will be accompanied by a small exhibition in Rare Books and Special Collections. Our Library holds a large collection of early Ruskin imprints, reflecting his importance for the young University of Notre Dame.

On the evening of Ruskin’s birthday, February 8, Clive Wilmer – poet, Cambridge professor, and Master of the Guild of St George – will offer the inaugural Ruskin Birthday Address. This Address will be an annual event, focused on the Anthropocene and the humanistic response to it.

Confirmed speakers include:
Siobhan Carroll: associate professor of English at the University of Delaware with a strong interest in eco-criticism and British literature. She is the author of An Empire of Air and Water: Uncolonizable Space in the British Imagination, 1750-1850and also has written and published several  original science fiction short stories.

David M. Craig: Professor of Religious Studies at Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis. Author of John Ruskin and the Ethics of Consumption.

Lucy Hartley: Professor of English at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Author of Physiognomy and the Meaning of Expression in Nineteenth-Century Culture and Democratising Beauty in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Art and the Politics of Public Life.

Howard Hull: Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society. Director of Brantwood, Ruskin’s house and garden in Cumbria.

Frederic Albritton Jonsson: Associate Professor of History at the University of Chicago. Author of Enlightenment’s Frontier: the Scottish Highlands and the Origins of Environmentalism, and co-author with Vicky Albritton of  Green Victorians: The Simple Life in John Ruskin’s Lake District.

Sandra Kemp: Professor, Lancaster University, and Director of the Ruskin Library and Research Centre for Culture, Landscape and the Environment. Author of Kipling’s Hidden Narratives, and editor of the Oxford Companion to Edwardian Fiction.

Deanna Kreisel: Associate professor of English at the University of British Columbia, and co-founder of Vcologies, an international working group of nineteenth-centuryist scholars interested in ecocriticism and environmental studies. Author of Economic Woman: Demand, Gender, and Narrative Closure in Eliot and Hardy.

Eugene McCarraher: Eugene McCarraher: Associate Professor of Humanities and History at Villanova University. Author of articles on Ruskin’s economic thought as part of his current project; his forthcoming book is entitled The Enchantments of Mammon: How Capitalism became the Religion of America.

Sara Maurer: Associate Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame. Author of The Dispossessed State. Narratives of Ownership in Nineteenth-Century Britain and Ireland.

Jeremy Melius: Assistant professor of Art History at Rutgers University. Recent article,“Ruskin’s Copies.”

Benjamin Morgan: Associate Professor of English at the University of Chicago. Author of The Outward Mind: Materialist Aesthetics in Victorian Science and Literature.

Morna O’Neill: Associate professor in Art History at Wake Forest University. Author of Walter Crane: The Arts and Crafts, Painting, and Politics, 1875-1890.

Jesse Cordes Selbin: post-doctoral lecturer at University of California at Berkeley. Recent article, “‘Read with Attention’: John Cassell, John Ruskin, and the History of Close Reading.”

Lars Spuybroek: Professor of Architecture at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Author of The Sympathy of Things: Ruskin and the Ecology of Design.

Judith Stoddard: Associate Professor of English and Interim Associate Provost of Graduate Education and Dean of the Graduate School at Michigan State University. Author of Ruskin’s Culture Wars: Fors Clavigera and the Crisis of Victorian Liberalism.

Rachel Teukolsky: Associate Professor of English at Vanderbilt University. Author of The Literate Eye: Victoria Art Writing and Modernist Aesthetics.

Laura Dassow Walls: William P. and Hazel B. White Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame. Author of Henry David Thoreau: A Life, and The Passage to Cosmos: Alexander von Humboldt and the Shaping of America.

Sharon Aronofsky Weltman: Davis Alumni Professor of English at Louisiana State University. Author of Performing the Victorian: John Ruskin and Identity in Theater, Science, and Education and Ruskin’s Mythic Queen: Gender Subversion in Victorian Culture.

Clive Wilmer: Emeritus Fellow of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge; Master of the Guild of St George. Editor of Penguin Classics editions of John Ruskin and William Morris.

Amy Woodson-Boulton: Associate professor of history at Loyola Marymount University. Author of  Transformative Beauty: Art Museums in Industrial Britain, and editor of Visions of the Industrial Age, 1830–1914: Modernity and the Anxiety of Representation.

The organizers and principal sponsors of this event are the Reilly Center for Science, Technology, and Values; Notre Dame Research; and the Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts. We gratefully acknowledge the sponsorship as well of: Notre Dame Energy; the Department of Art, Art History, and Design; the Notre Dame Institute for Advanced Study; the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture; Sustainability Studies; the William P. and Hazel B. White Chair; the Department of English; and the Program of Liberal Studies.

Originally published at reilly.nd.edu.