Abstract

In Lewis Carroll’s novel Sylvie and Bruno, a “spectacled woman,” whose conversation consists entirely of the philosophical cant of the day, pronounces to a group of alarmed party guests: “the Objective is only attainable through the Subjective!” 1 If, as Lorraine Daston argues, Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s importation of Immanuel Kant to nineteenth-century England “crystallized an opposition of subjective and objective,” for Coleridge himself and other romantics the preeminence of the subjective in this scheme “had yet to become a matter for regret or reproach.” 2 By the mid-nineteenth century, however, objectivity had come to seem both newly desirable and disturbingly elusive, so that by the time of Carroll’s 1880 novel the difficulty of achieving objectivity had become a cliche. Even in the natural sciences, where objectivity had come to be a core value, having replaced the traditional standard of “truth to nature,” it was defined only negatively, as the absence of subjective distortion, and regarded as an unreachable, if laudable, goal. 3 This oppositional epistemological framework had, of course, profound implications for those Victorian artists who, heirs of the romantics, regarded art as a vehicle for the exploration and manifestation of subjective experience. The contemporary reverence for the universality associated with objectivity squared uneasily with a conception of artistic production and consumption as idiosyncratic, and made the determination of the proper function and value of art, as witnessed in Ruskin’s “A Joy Forever,” an abiding critical preoccupation. Given that even contemporary economic theory—which aimed to provide a systematic account of social value—concerned itself with subjective desires and their effects on the market rather than the inherent qualities of commodities, it is perhaps unsurprising that the value of art should have seemed particularly liable to fluctuation. 4 As William Morris lamented, “in spite of all the success I have had, I have not failed to be conscious that the art I have been helping to produce would fall with the death of a few of us who really care about it, that a reform in art which is

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