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Victorian Age notes from Norton Anthology of English Literature*

In the 18th century the pivotal city center was Paris, but he middle of the 19th century it was London (London expanded from about 2 million inhabitants when Victoria came to the throne to 6 million at the time of her death) The process of moving away from an agricultural based society toward an modern urban economy continues as more people continue to move from the country to the city. Industrialization introduced rapid technological advancements, so that in one Victorian lifetime saw the invention of fast railways, iron ships, the telegraph, photography, anesthetics, and universal compulsory education. Because it was the first country to become industrialized, England became a financial powerhouse. London became the worlds banker by the 1870s, and Englands colonies covered 1/4th of the entire land mass of the globe. 1 in 4 people in the world was a subject of Queen Elizabeth. Although many Englanders reveled in the countrys preeminence, they also suffered from an anxious sense of something lost, a sense too of being displaced persons in a world made alien by technological changes that had been exploited too quickly for the adaptive powers of the human psyche

Queen Victoria and the Victorian Temper


Queen Victoria reigned from 1837-1901 The qualities that she was most known for (earnestness, moral responsibility, domestic propriety) became qualities that Victorian society prized in itself. Victoria was the mother of 9 children and after her husband died, a perpetually blackgarbed widow. She was the very emblem of domestic fidelity, and her subjects embraced that sentiment (1886) Authors of the period viewed their time as one in transition. ThomasCarlyle suggested that society should move away from the introspection promoted by the Romantics and toward a higher moral purpose. He saw it as a time to address ourselves to the active and daily objects which lay before us. (1887) Because the period is so long, critics have designated three sages (spanning the 70 years) Early Victorian (1830-1848): Tennyson, Carlyle, Ruskin, Charlotte and Emily Bronte, Gaskell Mid-Victorian (1848-1870): Dickens, Eliot, E.B. Browning, Matthew Arnold, Karl Marx Late Victorian (1870-1901): Hardy, Eliot, Kipling, Yeats, Wilde, Conrad

Early Period: (1830-48)

1830first steam powered public railway station opened from Liverpool to Manchester. Just as they did in America, train lines connected the country allowing for the growth of commerce and shrinking the distance between cities.

Manufacturing towns wanted stronger Parliamentary representation England was still running an archaic electoral system that did not include the new and highly populated industrial towns The Reform Bill of 1832 extended the right to vote to all males owning property worth ten pounds or more in annual rent. The voting public included the lower middle classes but not the working classes, who did not obtain the vote until 1867 (the second reform bill) The Reform bill of 1832 also broke up the monopoly of power that the conservative landowners had (Tory party had been in office almost continuously from 1783-1830). The Bill represented the beginning of a new age and age of growing middle-class power While industrialization helped to distribute power more fairly among the classes, it also brought about economic and social difficulties. The 1830s and 40s were known as The Time of Troubles. During that period, there was a bad harvest, an economic crash, a period of high unemployment, and rioting. The conditions of the new coal mining camps were terrible. Workers in industrial cities often lived in horribly crowded slums and women and children experienced unimaginably brutal conditions in factories and mines. These conditions led to the Chartists movement a large organization of workers (somewhat like a union), which fell apart by 1848, but succeeded in opening discussions for workers rights and reform.

The mid-Victorian Period and Religious controversy (1848-70)


Time of prosperity; however, writers, particularly Charles Dickens, were highly affected by the Time of Troubles and continued to comment on social decay during this period. This age is often referred to as the Age of Improvement Prince Albert (Victorias husband) opened a Great Exhibition in Hyde Parke, where a gigantic glass greenhouse, the Crystal Palace, had been erected to display the exhibits of modern industry and science. It was one of the first buildings constructed according to modern architectural principles and was considered a triumph of Victorian technology. During this period, the Factory acts in Parliament restricted child labor and limited hours of employment, and the condition of the working places were gradually improved. Investment people, money, and technology abroad creates and solidifies the British empire. Between 1853-1880 over 2 million emigrated from Britain to British empires. During this time, Australia and Canada saw large scale immigration, and 1876 Queen Victoria was named the empress of India Many saw the expansion of the British empire as a moral responsibility, what Kipling later calls The White Mans Burden Queen Victoria claimed that the imperial mission was to protect the poor natives and advance civilization The missionary cause was supported by the Evangelical movement. Evangelicals emphasized spiritual transformation of the individual by conversion and a strictly moral Christian life. They were zealously dedicated to good causes (they were responsible for the emancipation of all the slaves in the British Empire as early as 1833). At the same time, this period was characterized by a crisis of faith. During this period scientific processes of analysis were being applied to the Bible. Geology and Astronomy

began to disrupt the religious notions about the growth of the world, and Darwins Origin of the Species (1859) and The Descent of Man (1871) were published and forced a reevaluation of long-established assumptions of the values attached to humanitys special role in the world (1868)

The Late Victorian Period and the Decay of Victorian Values (1870-1901)

In the final decades of the century, British imperialism reached its apex but imperialism was taking its toll in rebellions, massacres, and bungled wars. The United States began to compete on economically and England lost some of its financial power. The Nineties- Fin de siecle a melancholy cultivated by the knowledge that the end of an era was close at hand. Many critics call this time period degeneration

The Role of Women


1918 women get the vote even though the first petitions to Parliament were introduced as early as the 1840s Married Womans property Acts (1870-1908) allowed married women to own and operate their own property The Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act of 1857 that established a civil divorce court and provided a deserted wife the right to apply for protection order that would allow her rights to her property. Previously, women could only divorce their husbands for adultery if it was combined with cruelty, incest, bigamy, or bestiality. The custody act of 1839 gave a mother the right to petition the court of access to her minor children In 1848 the first womens college was established in London. By the end of the century women could earn degrees from 12 universities (not Oxford or Cambridge). The most important image of womanhood in the Victorian period comes from a poem by Coventry Patmore The Angel in the House: this concept of womanhood stressed womans purity and selflessness. Protected and enshrined within the home, her role was to create a place of peace where man could take refuge from the difficulties of modern life (1873)

Poetry
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Novel was the dominant form throughout the period, and the poetry of the period reflects the novels popularity. Poets during the Victorian period often sought new ways of telling stories in verse (1876) Robert Browning and Alfred Lord Tennyson introduced the dramatic monologue in an attempt to explore character psychology poetically.

** Notes taken in whole and in part from Abrams, M.H. et al. The Norton Anthology of English Literature. 8th ed. New York: Norton, 2006

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