The VictoriansLaurence Lerner Holmes & Meier Publishers, 1978 - 228 sider How closely was the social reality of Victorian England reflected in the vivid picture evoked by its literature? In this survey of the Victorian era the relation between literature and society is explained by means of three distinct sections. The first delineates the literary history in two chapters on the Victorian novel and Victorian poetry respectively. In the second and largest section a series of essays discuss various fundamental aspects of Victorian society: the economic and social framework, government and institutions, the sense of the past, painting and illustration, religion and the role of women. The third section offers two essays which explicitly relate a particular work to the society: one on Dickens' Dombey and Son, and the other on Tennyson's 'The Princess'. By turning to each essay after the rounded picture of Victorian society given in the previous sections, the reader will not only find his appreciation enhanced, but will also be enabled to argue back on equal terms in a way that is never possible with a survey of literature alone. |
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Side 32
... perhaps the most difficult of all nineteenth - century poets to sum up , because he wrote so much and in such varied modes . As a nature poet he can write in the Keats- Tennyson manner , though with a new selfconsciousness ( as in ...
... perhaps the most difficult of all nineteenth - century poets to sum up , because he wrote so much and in such varied modes . As a nature poet he can write in the Keats- Tennyson manner , though with a new selfconsciousness ( as in ...
Side 43
... perhaps , not his best work poetically ; Bishop Blougram's Apology ( 1855 ) , on the other hand , is genuinely dramatic , and though it broaches the issues in which Browning was interested ( that complete disbelief is as hard as ...
... perhaps , not his best work poetically ; Bishop Blougram's Apology ( 1855 ) , on the other hand , is genuinely dramatic , and though it broaches the issues in which Browning was interested ( that complete disbelief is as hard as ...
Side 210
... perhaps , to begin with this reminder of an approach to poetry utterly different from the one which this book invites , in order to remind ourselves that in relating a poem to its society we ought never to ignore what makes it poetry ...
... perhaps , to begin with this reminder of an approach to poetry utterly different from the one which this book invites , in order to remind ourselves that in relating a poem to its society we ought never to ignore what makes it poetry ...
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Anglican aristocratic Arnold Beatrice Webb believed Bleak House Carlyle Carlyle's central chapter Chartism Christian church Condition-of-England question contemporary contrast criticism culture David Copperfield Dickens Dickens's doctrine Dombey Dombey and Son dramatic economic effect Emma Paterson England English essay example factory feminists fiction Froude George Eliot girls Gothic human ideal illustration imagination important income Industrial Revolution institutions intellectual interest kind labour late Victorian literary literature Little Dorrit London look lyric marriage ment middle classes Middlemarch modern moral movement narrative nature nineteenth century novel novelists Oxford Oxford Movement painting perhaps period poem poet poetic poetry political poor population poverty Pre-Raphaelites Princess problems radical railway readers realism reform religious Romantic Ruskin Samuel Smiles satire seems seen sense social socialist society style Tennyson Thackeray theme tion Tractarian traditional urban Victorian literature wages woman women workers working-class writing