Brooks (Michael W.), John Ruskin and Victorian Architecture, Edite par 8vo, xv, 364 pages, illustrations ; 25 cm, New Brunswick and London, Rutgers University Press, 1987.
Hardcover. Etat : Fine.1st Edition. 106 illustrations. Red cloth with silver spine titling. An architectural education; John Ruskin, C.R. Cockerell, and the proportions of architecture; Chapel and church: the religious background to architectural theory; Describing buildings: Ruskin and nineteenth-century architectural prose; Ruskinism: its visual content; Ruskinism and the spirit of the age; Benjamin Woodward and the formation of Ruskinian gothic; The 1850s: the struggle for a Victorian gothic;The 1860s: triumph and dispersal; Ruskin versus the profession; John Ruskin, John Henry Chamberlain, and the civic gospel; Revaluation and a new Ruskinism; Ruskin's influence in America; The guild movement and the decline of Ruskinism; Summary and aftermath.