Victorianism Flashcards

1
Q

Comparison

A
  • Pride on the presence → “Progress, expansion, mobility”
  • Industrialisation and advancing sciences
  • Realism instead of fantasy
  • Public prudery, hypocrisy, women as ‘angel in the house’

= code of conduct → set of rules outlining the social norms = strict religious rules and responsibilities of, and or proper practices, for the individual

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2
Q

Timeline

A

Start: Reign Queen Victoria 1837 / Reform Bill: 1832
End: 1901 Reign Queen Victoria; 1901: Edwardian Era

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3
Q

Early Victorianism (1830-50):

A
  • rigid code of religious norms; clear distinction between male and female attributes; belief in progress
  • Charles Dickens: Oliver Twist
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4
Q

Mid Victorianism

A
  • begin: 1859 Charles Darwin: On the origin of the Species → promoted Victorian crisis of faith
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5
Q

Late Victorianism

A
  • reshaping prevailing ideas about morality, religion, gender and artistic conventions → discussions, ideas and criticism came up
  • Arthur Conan Doyle: Sherlock Holmes
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6
Q

Society & Politics

A
  • Many Changes to Social and Political Life: bad living conditions → industrial revolution brought massive changes
  • 1834: New Poor Law: arm houses turned into workhouses → country divided between the increasingly wealthy and the poor
  • Ireland: Irish potato famine
  • industrial revolution: railway (1830); Great Exhibition, London; telephone (1876)
  • Colonialism and Imperialism: economic expansion and political power
  • Age of Morals and Values: nuclear family; “Victorian morality”: strict social code of conduct
  • Population: England & Wales doubled; Ireland’s decreased; democratic & socialist movements in the working class
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7
Q

Novel

A
  • leading literary genre
  • serial publishing in periodicals
  • forms: Bildungsroman; political, detective, serialised, historical and gothic novels
  • approach to social reality: different characters, great number of plots
  • Oliver Twist; Dorian Gray
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8
Q

Poetry

A
  • easier to understand, focus on form and language rather than content
  • themes involve religious scepticism and the conflict between science and humanity
  • forms: lyrical, heroic, tender and passionate poetry
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9
Q

Drama

A

comedies of manners (e.g. Wilde)
themes: romantic triangles, strained coincidences, heroines in physical danger, aristocratic villains, country vs. city life, sexual discretion or lack of it etc.

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10
Q

Magazines and Newspapers

A
  • offered stories to the masses
  • journalism grew further: The Times, The Daily Telegraph
  • political cartoons, entertaining stories, advertisement, letters to the editor, police report
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