Title: Victorian Novel
1Victorian Novel
Vincenzo DAngelo Gabriele Rabino
Classe 5 A
Anno Scolastico 2010/2011
2Hystorical Background
The reign of Queen Victoria from 1837 to 1901.
The Victorian Age
Industrial Revolution
- 1837 Victoria ascended to the throne
- 1846 Repeal of the Corn Laws
- 1851 The Great Exhibition at Crystal Palace in
London - 1854 Crimean War
- 1857 The East India Companys authority was
replaced on India - 1867 The Reform Bills
- 1870 The Education Act
- 1871 The Trade Union Act
- 1886 and 1893 The proposals for Irish Home Rule
were rejected. Rise to Sinn Fèin - 1899 Colonial conflicts with Boers
- 1901 Queen Victoria died and was succeeded by
Edward Prince of Wales
3Victorian Values
Utilitarianism
All thing have to be useful
Puritan Talents Parabola
People have to improve theirself condition.
Darwinism
Survival of the fittest
4Theme of Victorian Novel
The Victorian novel reflects social changes
- Theme
- Class rise of the working class
- Industrial System
- Contrast between rich and poor
- Education and children condition
- Family life (middle class)
- The struggle for democracy
5Narrative Technique
The Victorian novel featured several developments
in narrative technique
- Full description and exposition
- Authorial essays
- Multi-plotting featuring several central
characters - Use of pathos and grotesque
It is where the factory develop
6Dickens Oliver Twist
Now consider the extract from Oliver Twist
written by Charles Dickens in 1837-38. The
extract is taken from Chapter 2
Oliver Twist presents some aspect of Victorian
novel.
- The novel was written in 1837-38 during the
Social Unrest. - Differences between social classes.
- Description of Everyday World.
- The novel ends with an happy ending.
- The setting is in London City and in a workhouse.
- Third Person intrusive omniscient narrator
7Nicholas Nickleby
Now I am going to analyze is taken from an other
Dickens novel. The extract describe the first
school day of the teacher Nickleby.
- Differences between social classes. (Master
Squeers behaviors) - Description of Everyday World.
- Use of the grotesque (characterization of Mr
Squeers) - Condemn of education system
- Third person intrusive omniscient narrator
8Hard Times
Its an other novel by Dickens. it is showed a
difficult time in the imaginary city of Coketown .
- It attacks industrialisation
- Mr Bounderby is the typical self-made man
- Utilitarianism
- Third person intrusive omniscient narrator
- Use of the grotesque and phatos
9Why did novel have so success?
Novel appealed to readers because of its
The novelists of the Victorian Age
- Realism (semi realism)
- Impulse to describe the everyday world the reader
could recognize - Introduction of characters who were blends of
virtue and vice - Attempts to display the natural growth of
personality - Expressions of emotion love, humor, suspense,
melodrama, pathos (deathbed scenes) - Moral earnestness and wholesomeness, including
crusades against social evils and self-censorship - Improvement of the standard morality of the times
- Accepted middle class values
- Treated the problem of the individual's
adjustment to his society - Emphasized well-rounded middle-class characters
- Portrayed the hero as a rational man of virtue
- Believed that human nature is fundamentally good
and lapses are errors of judgment
10Anti-Victorian Novel
Jude The Obscure by Thomas Hardy
He uses a third person omniscient external
narrator.
No judgment only description
Cinematic effect
It is the first novel with a a working class hero