Rossetti Context Flashcards

1
Q

Rossetti’s Life

A
  • Father was a political exile, poet, and translator
  • Lifelong devotion to the Anglican faith.
  • poor family despite literary connections
  • Wanted to be governess but poor health prevented it
  • Brother Dante Gabriel, helped found the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, one of the most influential artistic movements of the Victorian period.
  • All three siblings were writers
  • As her family’s financial situation worsened and her health deteriorated, Rossetti grew more devoutly religious.
  • 1859-1870, Rossetti volunteered with the Church Penitentiary Movement, which offered a home, religious instruction, and training to former prostitutes.
  • The experience influenced her thoughts about fallen women
  • Christina never married, although she was engaged twice - one of her fiancés was the Pre-Raphaelite painter, James Collinson (1850)
  • Broke up w Charles Cayley in 1866
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2
Q

Historical Context

A
  • 19th C: strict societal expectations about women’s behavior.
  • female expressions of sexuality looked down upon.
  • sexual double standard
  • women suffered much more serious consequences for their sexual
    actions than men.
  • Victorians believed women were morally superior to men, so sexual “transgressions” made them bad and irredeemable.
  • Women expected to be virgins until they married, be faithful, and avoid looking interested in sex.
  • If a woman violated these norms, she might be regarded as “fallen” and lose her reputation, and maybe family and home
  • Men’s sexual behavior was not limited or policed in this way.
  • The term “fallen” itself could encompass a variety of acts, from engaging in sex outside of marriage, to becoming a mistress, to prostitution.
  • Husbands could divorce their wives for being unfaithful
  • many works of art and literature from the nineteenth century represented the fallen woman as abandoned by her family, husband, and lover, contemplating suicide, or even as a corpse.
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3
Q

Historical context 2

A
  • 1860’s: emerging but still uncommon view that women should have access to higher education. Repetitively denied throughout the century. Rossetti’s parents believed in girls being educated, could access reading/writing/language skills
  • 1867 John Stuart Mill: controversial, stated gender inequality is “one of the hindrances to human improvement”
  • complicated views on female equality. due to biblical interpretations, believed women were inferior to men- status quo should be maintained
  • Often argued for female representation in parliament
  • Vocal about unjust sexual exploitation of prostitutes (seeking redemption for fallen women at the St Mary Magdalene Penitentiary, Highgate)
  • Augusta Webster wrote asking for support on campaign to give women the vote
  • Received letter of refusal due to “unalterable distinction between men and women”
  • Queen Victoria: ‘wicked folly of women’s rights’
  • Victorian values: ‘courage’ v ‘virginal innocence’ outlined by Jan Marsh
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