@inbook{ddefc7db3d484adbacdf41e2648c5896,
title = "The shock of aestheticism: embodiment, abstraction, and the avant-garde as commodity",
abstract = "The 1870s was a critical period for the transformation of British aestheticism into a mainstream phenomenon that both commodified and parodied its avant-garde origins. This transformation unfolds through three representative controversies: the 1870 publication of Dante Gabriel Rossetti{\textquoteright}s Poems, which was savaged by Robert Buchanan in his review {\textquoteleft}The Fleshly School of Poetry{\textquoteright}; the appearance of Walter Pater{\textquoteright}s Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873), which pitted an avant-garde aesthetics against conventional art historical criticism; and the notorious libel trial of 1878, in which John Ruskin{\textquoteright}s attack on James McNeill Whistler{\textquoteright}s painting Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket led to a legal dispute that hinged on the definition of art itself. All three episodes reveal a doubleness at the heart of aestheticism: it is committed to both idealised abstraction and concrete embodiment. This doubleness underlies aestheticism{\textquoteright}s status as an arcane philosophy that nonetheless manifests itself in highly recognisable and commmercialisable popular forms.",
keywords = "aestheticism, D. G. Rossetti, Water Pater, John Ruskin, J. M. Whistler, scandal, commodity, fleshly, Renaissance",
author = "Veronica Alfano",
year = "2025",
doi = "10.1017/9781108954792.009",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781108845182",
series = "Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press (CUP)",
pages = "166--185",
editor = "Alison Chapman",
booktitle = "Nineteenth-century literature in transition",
address = "United Kingdom",
}