Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Victorian Literature
- Industry
- A Doll's House - Mrs Linde has to work to
provide for her family but is removed from work
- Hard Times - set in Coketown, a town built due to expansion from
industry, it is a dirty, filthy town; 'would have been red if the smoke
and ashes had allowed it' - 'like the painted face of a savage'
- The Golden Year - walks through an
abandoned quarry, which shows the era has
moved on from these old ways of production
- Empire
- Ode to the Duke of
Wellington/Charge of the
Light Brigade -
patriarchal, written for
honour, common in the
time of the empire
- Cecil Rhodes - patriarchal, believes it
is God's will for Britain to take over
and make the world a better place
- Mrs Warren's Profession - shows the developments
due to the empire, Mrs Warren has connections
across Europe and runs them from Britain
- Women
- The Princess - women's role in society, not
approved, secludes herself from 'evil' of men and
they encourage her to 'come down o' maid'
- Wuthering Heights & Great Expectations - Catherine & Miss Havisham are
both wild, socially unacceptable women ('I am Heathcliff!'), and they eventually
meet a grisly end, showing the social disapproval of women like them
- A Doll's House - Nora is repressed by her husband Torvald,
and throughout the play slowly builds up the courage to leave
him before 'Nora leaves. The sound of the door shutting
downstairs is heard.' Outward view, disliked by critics and
meant the play was suspended from view
- Mrs Warren's Profession - Despite being the
owner of the brothel aesthetically, Mrs Warren is
controlled and manipulated by her partners
- My Last Duchess - he views his wife as an item, shows
the upper class' treatment of their wives
- Urban Poverty
- Great Expectations - Pip views urban poverty as he walks
through London but ignores it in his new role as a gentleman,
whereas rural Joe is scared by London and reluctant to visit Pip
- Dipsychus - upper class looking down at the
urban poor - 'how good it is to have money,
hey ho, how good it is to have money!'
- The Cry of the Children - comments on the barbaric treatment
of children in the era, is an overall comment on society as well
- Society
- Diary of A Nobody - satirical comment on the
middle class, showing their ways as
inconsequential and pointless; episodic
structure, in form of fake diary entries
- Pygmalion - Eliza Doolittle is a
common working class girl
manipulated by two upper class
men for fun
- The Golden Year - two sides of society, optimists and
pessimists, the future is deep in question during the era
- Culture
- Relegion
- Up-Hill - complete belief in God, talking about
the struggles of life but rewards of the
afterlife 'beds for all who come' although 'the
road wind(s) up hill all the way'
- Dover Beach - doubting faith,
compares faith to the tide going out
suggesting it is a thing of the past
- Science