the victorian age 1832: 1 st reform bill; sir walter scott dies 1837: victoria becomes queen 1847:...

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The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth as poet laureate 1851: Great Exhibition 1859: Origin of the Species 1867: 2 nd Reform Bill 1901: Death of Victoria

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Page 1: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

The Victorian Age• 1832: 1st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies• 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen• 1847: Communist Manifesto• 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth as

poet laureate• 1851: Great Exhibition• 1859: Origin of the Species• 1867: 2nd Reform Bill• 1901: Death of Victoria

Page 2: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Rise of London• Great urbanization • London replaces Paris as dominant city of

the world

Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/photos/postcards/08.html

Page 3: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

John Henry Henshall, The Public Bar

Page 4: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

William Powell Frith, The Railway Station (1862)

Page 5: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth
Page 6: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

William May Egley, Omnibus Life in London(1859)

Page 7: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Augustus Leopold Egg, Travelling Companions (1862)

Page 8: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Picadilly Circus 1893

Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/art/architecture/feist/11.html

Page 9: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Trafalgar Square

Page 10: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Rising Industrialization

Images borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/art/design/textiles/intro.html

Page 11: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth
Page 12: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Sir Luke Fildes, Applicants for Admission to a Casual Ward

(1874)

Page 13: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Eyre Crowe, The Dinner Hour, Wigan (1874)

Page 14: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Tremendous Colonial Empire• Colonial Office, Whitewall

Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/buildings/classical/1.html

Page 15: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

England’s Empire

Jubilee Clock Tower, Malaysia, 1897

Mutiny Memorial

Page 16: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Rise of Nationalist Sentiment

National Gallery, Trafalgar Square

Natural History Museum

Page 17: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Great National Accomplishments

Royal Albert Hall

Lyceum Theatre

Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/art/architecture/alberthall/7.html Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/buildings/classical/3.html

Page 18: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

The National Past

The Oxford MuseumImage borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/art/architecture/arch4.html

Page 19: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

A Modern Nation

The United Service 1828

Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/buildings/classical/5.html

Page 20: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Victoria Embankment

Page 21: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Bank of England 1844

Page 22: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Triumphant Reign of VictoriaVictoria Memorial 1911

Albert Memorial

Page 23: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

1832 Reform Bill• Widened the vote• Abolished rotten boroughs• Redistributed parliamentary

representation

John Robertson Reid,A Country Cricket Match(1878)

Page 24: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

1830s-40s: Time of Troubles

Sir Hubert von Herkomer, Hard Times (1885)• Hungry 40s

Page 25: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Chartists• 1838: People’s Charter—parliamentary

petition• First sustained, inclusive working-class

movement in modern English history• Universal manhood suffrage• Secret ballot• Payment for members of Parliament• Abolition of the property qualification for

members• Equal electoral districts• Annual elections

Page 26: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Corn Laws • England had maintained high tariffs on

grain imports to protect domestic agriculture

• Abolished high tariffs on grain imports• 1845: Crop failures• Potato blight

Page 27: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Rise of Benthamite Utilitarianism

• Greatest pleasure to the greatest number• Workhouse theory• Philosophy of political economy that

inspired the Industrial Revolution• Influenced by Malthus and Priestley• Importance of Jeremy Bentham and

James Mill• Basis for hedonistic philosophy• Carlyle, Ruskin, John Stuart Mill, and

others would criticize

Page 28: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Age of Improvement—1848-1870

• Growth of Empire• Rise of prisons• Great Exhibition• National confidence Frank Holl, Newgate (1878)

Page 29: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

The Great Exhibition (1851)• Designed to showcase England’s

accomplishments• Emphasized the scientific and artistic

developments of the 19c• Demonstrated England’s vast global

empire and influence• Revealed the tremendous optimism and

hope of the Victorian Age

Page 30: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

The Crystal Palace

Page 31: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

The Crystal Palace

Page 32: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth
Page 33: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

The Factory Acts (1802-78)• Increased regulation on labor in mines

and factories• Reduction to 16-hour day

Page 34: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Prominent Emigration

Harry Nelson O’Neil,Eastward Ho! (1857)

Page 35: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

“White Man’s Burden”• John Frederick Lewis, The Mid-day Meal, Cairo (1875)

Page 36: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Biblical High Criticism• Scientifically re-examined facts and

figures of the BibleDavid Roberts, Rome from the Convent of San Onofrio (1861)

Page 37: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Darwin’s Origin of the Species (1859)

• Monumental attack on the social authority of religion

• Served as more of a confirmation of already-held beliefs

• Led to prominent debates amongst scientists

• Forerunner of Thomas Huxley’s work on science

Page 38: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

John Tyndall

• Age of the earth• Strong influence on Tennyson’s In

Memoriam (1850)• Challenged biblical accounts about the

origin and history of the earth• Forced Victorian society to re-think who

created the earth and how• Suggests that creation was neither

complete nor perfect

Page 39: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Victorian Decay (1870-1901)• England as technological consumer

culture• Decline in national optimism• Imperial aims questioned• New challenge of artist• Rise of aestheticism• Irish question

Erskine Nicol, An Irish Emigrant arriving in Liverpool (1871)

Page 40: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Aesthetic Movement of 1890s• Late-century movement that aimed to

celebrate for its own sake• Great influence of William Pater, John

Ruskin, and French symbolist poets (e.g. Charloes Baudelaire)

• Oscar Wilde, Lionel Johnson, Aubrey Beardsley

• Response to the earnestness of Victorian art and society

Page 41: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Role of Women• Women did not share in reform• Became integral to Victorian society• Angel in the house model• Rise of domesticity• Few employment opportunities

Richard Redgrave, The Governess

Page 42: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Social Reform for Women• Custody Act of 1839• Divorce and Matrimonial Act of 1857• Married Women’s Property Acts • Increased pressure for women’s

education options

Page 43: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Women’s Role in Literature• Governess novel• Angel in the house• Fallen Woman• Exalted conception of home• Increased “social” importance of woman

Emily Mary Osborn, Nameless andFaceless (1857)

Page 44: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Literacy and Publishing• Continued increase in literacy• Better printing technology• Growth of the periodical• More communities of readers• Difficult relationship between writer and

public readerships

Page 45: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Novel as Dominant Form• Realism• Social realism/social problems• Material conditions• Class structures• Tensions of heroine • Novel’s affinity with women and

domesticity• Sensationalist novel

Page 46: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Victorian Poetry• Always seems inferior when compared to

Romanticism• Develop new ways to tell stories—e.g.

dramatic monologue• Do not share Romantics’ confidence in

the imagination• Emphasis on visual imagery and sound• Seek to present psychology in new way• Poetry of mood and character

Page 47: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Victorian Non-Fiction Prose• Extended function of didactic prose writer• Investigation of important social issues

– Education– Labor and Utilitarianism– Science– Religion– Empire– Art and Literature– Women– Crime and Prison

• Lack of Drama until 1890s

Page 48: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)• Great teacher of

the age• American following

—Emerson• Prominent crisis of

faith—recorded in Sartor Resartus

• Highly personal and psychological prose style

Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/victorian/sculpture/boehm/7.html

Page 49: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881)• Criticizes soulless

world• Vitalism—sees

great energy of world as presence of godhead

• Critic of laissez-faire and Benthamite Utilitarianism

• Conservative/pseudo-fascist desire for hero-worship

Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/victorian/carlyle/gallery/portrait3.html

Page 50: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Past and Present (1843)• Call for heroic leadership• Need to replace a “do-nothing

Aristocracy”• 1110: serious time• 1111: Mammon

Image borrowed from: http://encarta.msn.com/find/MediaMax.asp?pg=3&ti=0325F000&idx=461522992 Image borrowed from: http://65.107.211.206/victorian/decadence/mb/dgrcircle8.html

Page 51: The Victorian Age 1832: 1 st Reform Bill; Sir Walter Scott dies 1837: Victoria Becomes Queen 1847: Communist Manifesto 1850: Tennyson succeeds Wordsworth

Past and Present (1843)• 1112: Gurth—14c peasant was happy• Liberty has led to starvation• 1115: leadership must come from within• 1116: hope of awakening a British man• Addresses captains of Industry re:

England’s fate• 1117: need for love• 1118: awake ye noble workers• Work requires organization