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The Victorian Period: Great Change and Great Peace

The Victorian Period: Great Change and Great Peace. Peace and Economic Growth: Britain Rules. Queen Victoria has long reign: 1837-1901 Political and social stability Napoleon had been defeated at Waterloo in 1815 “Empire” of 1600s and 1700s w/ interests in India and U.S. continued to grow.

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The Victorian Period: Great Change and Great Peace

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  1. The Victorian Period: Great Change and Great Peace

  2. Peace and Economic Growth: Britain Rules • Queen Victoria has long reign: 1837-1901 • Political and social stability • Napoleon had been defeated at Waterloo in 1815 • “Empire” of 1600s and 1700s w/ interests in India and U.S. continued to grow

  3. Peace and Economic Growth: Britain Rules (cont.’d) • Political and social stability (cont.’d) • Queen Victoria was empress to over 200,000,000 people living OUTSIDE Britain • “The sun never sets on the British empire.”

  4. Industrial Revolution • new towns • Liverpool • new goods • new wealth • new jobs • gradual political reforms • middle-class and working-class politicians achieve political power • monarchy and aristocracy left in place • monarchy left as figurehead of today

  5. The Idea of Progress • “An Acre in Middlesex” (Thomas Babington Macaulay) • For him (and other Victorians), history meant material possessions • He had an amazed regard for squalor and disorder of the past. • He had typical confident Victorian pride on their material advances and on their ability to solve social problems

  6. Religious Movements • Growth of Evangelicalism and Utilitarianism • Wide sweeping reforms

  7. Questions and Doubts • Victorian writers begin asking, “Does material comfort fully satisfy human needs and wishes?” • Exploiting of the earth and humans is questioned • Codes of authority/decorum mocked • Some writers state that materialist ideas of reality overlook the spirit and the soul that made life beautiful and just

  8. Thomas Hardy and A.E. Housman views of Macaulay’s and Huxley’s ideas of history and nature as flawed • Other writers were saying that man didn’t see the universe the way it really is • Charles Dickens (wrote in 1830s to 1865) • He writes about hollow, glittery, superficial and excessive people • Cost of progress resulting in description of huddle and waste of cities and the smoke and fire of industrial landscapes

  9. Thomas Hardy and A.E. Housman thought Macaulay’s and Huxley’s ideas of history and nature were flawed (cont.’d) • Other writers (cont.’d) • Robert Browning in “My Last Duchess” writes about a murderously possessive (hence excessive) duke Thomas Hardy

  10. “Smog” is described in 1871 by historian and social critic John Ruskin as… • “the plague wind” • “the storm-cloud of the nineteenth century” • “[m]ere smoke [that] would not blow to and fro in that wild way… [which] looks more to me as if it were made of dead men’s souls.”

  11. From Trust to Skepticism and Denial • Trust in transcendental power true of EARLY Victorian thought because they’re heirs of Romantic idea of the finite world interfused with divinity • Later in Victorian Era this idea would change radically.

  12. From Trust to Skepticism and Denial (cont.’d) • The highest function of writer and poet was to make man aware of connection between earth and heaven • Thomas Carlyle expressed this idea in his essay “The Poet as Hero” Thomas Carlyle

  13. Newer Victorian Writers • Gerald Manley Hopkins • Christina Rossetti • Some thought it unnecessary; these two, and others, celebrated relationship between man and nature that could be redemptive and joyous: • Algernon Charles Swinburne • Rudyard Kipling Gerald Manley Hopkins

  14. Newer Victorian Writers (cont.’d) • Others are saddened by what seemed to be the withdrawal of the divine from the world: • Matthew Arnold (“Dover Beach”) • the only thing certain is that existence is not governed by a benevolent intelligence that could care for its creatures Matthew Arnold

  15. Newer Victorian writers (cont.’d) • Whereas Dickens and George Eliot, a woman, had shown achievement through sympathy and unselfishness, Hardy and Housman pessimistically showed relationships bereft and betrayed by unfaithfulness, war, and other problems. Charles Dickens

  16. Newer Victorian writers (cont.’d) • Over the century, the trust in a transcendental power inherited from the Romantics eroded, giving way to uncertainty and spiritual doubt. Late-Victorian writers turned to a pessimistic exploration of the human struggle against indifferent natural forces.

  17. Revealing Reality, Creating Coherence • Victorian writers have a variety of purposes: • scare/shame into effective moral and political action • What it’s like to live in a pleasurable moment of intense feeling (ex., dramatic monologue of a character) • entertained • inform • reassure

  18. Lewis Carroll and Oscar Wilde show two purposes: • One, make readers hope or wonder if reality was really like it had been painted (ex., in Tennyson’s “In Memoriam” or in Browning’s poetry or in an essay by Macaulay) • Two, however bleak, the writer could make a pleasurable order in the world Oscar Wilde

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