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  1. ペイターに興味を抱くひと、呪縛されたひと、魅力と反発をおぼえるひと――ともかくペイターが少しでも気になるひとは、ぜひ当協会で研鑽を共にしましょう。. それによって研究にも日々の生にもあらたな視野が開けるはずと確信しています。. 日本 ...

  2. Walter Pater defines that our physical life is a constant motion of different elements. The different actions such as the passage of the blood, the wasting and repairing of the lenses of the eye, the modification of tissues are governed by elementary forces. Further, the action of these forces extends beyond us.

  3. Studies in Walter Pater and Aestheticism, so named in part because Walter Pater himself preferred the term "studies" for pieces of writing in which he stressed process and ongoing dialogue, is a scholarly journal with an essayistic approach. It features content on aestheticism and decadence more broadly, as well as material relating directly or indirectly…

  4. Walter Pater’s Reading: A Bibliography of his Library Borrowings and Literary References, 1858-1873 (1981) and Walter Pater and His Reading, 1874-1877: With a Bibliograpy of His Library Borrowings, 1878-1894 (1990). New York: Garland Publishing. In two volumes.

  5. Walter Pater (1839–94) was the foremost Victorian writer on art and on aesthetic experience. His ideas still shape modern assumptions about how art plays on our feelings and intellectual responses. This edition of Pater's complete works was published in 1900–1 in a limited edition of 775 copies.

  6. 10 de nov. de 2011 · Walter Pater (1839-94) was the foremost Victorian writer on art and on aesthetic experience. He brought his extensive knowledge of the history of art to bear on the new problem of how to explain the very personal affective response to beauty, and raised this into a central concern of aesthetic and philosophical thought. His ideas still shape modern assumptions about how art plays on our ...

  7. Walter Pater (1839–94) was the foremost Victorian writer on art and aesthetic experience. He brought his knowledge of the history of art to bear on the new problem of how to explain the very personal affective response to beauty, and raised this into a central concern of aesthetic and philosophical thought.