General information
1837-1901
Industrial Revolution
Age of empire
Technological progress (railways, telegraph, photography)
Telegraph -> a device to transmit messages
Scientific discoveries (Darwin / theory of evolution, astronomy, geology)
The Victorian Mentality
sense of a new era - historical consciousness
Action instead of introspection
-> sense of progress and sense of loss
Victorian values: earnestness (Ernsthaftigkeit), moral responsibility, domestic propriety (häusliches Eigentum)
Victorian Age - 3 parts
The Victorian Age can be divided in three periods
early Victorian period (1830-1848): “The Age of Reforms” + “Time of troubles”
The mid-Victorian period (1848-1870): “Age of Improvement”
The late Victorian period (1870-1901): Decay of Victorian values
First period - the age of reforms
1832 the first great reform act
male became the right to vote (who owns property that is worth more than 10 pound annual rent)
The electoral system in the United Kingdom wasn’t representative
Many “rotten boroughs” with very few voters had significant political influence, while cities like a Manchester and Birmingham where more people lived, had no representation at all
1867 second reform act
1884 third reform act
1918 right to vote for women
1834 poor law amendment act
changed the poverty relief system in England
Seven dials
was a district in central London
Overcrowded
It's residents lived in slums
Synonymous of poverty and crime
Chartism - the people's charter
it had six main aims
Division of the United Kingdom into equal electoral districts
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
believes that poetry:
should address social problems
Has an ethnical, moral and religious function
Deploys sentimental strategies and devices to this purpose
Writes as poet-prophet
international, famous author of the Victorian Age
Was neglected in the 20th century because of modernist bias against sentimental aesthetics
The cry of the children
sentimental protest poem
Central motif “crying”:
crying as “powerful imaginative site”
Different kinds of crying
Different functions of crying
Central motif “the wheels”:
as image of the oppressive system
In relationship to religious rhetoric and biblical language
Psychological dimension of the motif
drastic comparisons (children and animals / children and old men)
Pathos and pathetic diction
Sound quality of the poem
Metaphor of the family:
in the first lines: oh my brothers…, against their mothers…, children weeping…
how does the meaning of this metaphor change throughout the poem?
Which members of Victorian society were the addressee throughout the poem?
The mid-victorian period (1848-1870): “the age of improvement”
agriculture, trade and industry flourished
-> economic prosperity
Conditions of the working class gradually improved
Scientific discoveries
Consolidation of the British empire
___
The railway: new transportation system
1851 the great exhibition (Ausstellung)
Crystal Palace as an example of modern functional architecture
Exhibits demonstrate demonstrate the triumph of Victorian technology
Scientific discoveries challenge religious belief
Charles Darwins theory of evolution + natural selection undermined gods status
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