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Critical Realism in the Victorian Age

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Title: Critical Realism in the Victorian Age


1
Critical Realism in the Victorian Age
2
Victorian Novelists
Chronologically the Victorian period roughly
coincides with the reign of Queen Victoria over
England from 1836 to 1901.
In literature, the early Victorian age can be
said to be the age of critical realism. The
critical realism of the 19th century flourished
in the forties and in the early fifties.
Charles Dickens
Charlotte Brontë
Emily Brontë
William M. Thackeray
3
The Victorian Age critical realism
  • The critical realists described with much
    vividness and artistic skill the chief trait of
    the English society, and they criticized the
    capitalist system from a democratic viewpoint and
    delineated the crying contradictions of the
    social reality of that time.
  • The English critical realists of the 19th century
    not only gave a satirical portrayal of the
    bourgeoisie and all the ruling classes, but also
    showed profound sympathy for the common people.

4
Charles Dickens (1812-1870)
  • Without doubt the most popular of Victorian
    writers was Charles Dickens. From modest origins
    this clerk to Hansard became a world figure. His
    combination of sentimentality and his attacks on
    the social evils of the day made him highly
    successful. His readings added to his fame but
    hastened his death.

5
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6
Charles Dickens
  • Oliver Twist
  • David Copperfield
  • Great Expectations
  • A Tale of Two Cities

7
Oliver Twist????
  • It is Dickenss first true novel.
  • The language in Oliver Twist isn't hard to
    understand, and neither is the imagery and
    symbolism.
  • This simplicity has helped to make Oliver Twist a
    very satisfying book to read.

8
The Story
  • The first eleven chapters cover Oliver's story
    from his birth to his rescue by Brownlow.
  • The 2nd section, Chapters 12 through 39, is
    complicated by the introduction of many new
    characters and events. Here Oliver is kidnapped,
    robberies are planned, and romances develop.
    Monks and Fagin plot to destroy Oliver.
  • In the final chapters, from XL to LIII, all of
    the unanswered questions about Oliver's
    background are answered and he is finally rescued
    once and for all. The good characters are
    rewarded with the promise of future happiness,
    and the evil ones are punished.

9
Oliver Twist Chapter II
  • Oliver is sent to a branch-workhouse. The
    overseer, Mrs. Mann, receives an adequate sum for
    each childs upkeep, but she keeps most of the
    money and lets the children go hungry, sometimes
    even letting them die.
  • On Olivers 9th birthday, Mr. Bumble, the parish
    beadle, informs Mrs. Mann that Oliver is too old
    to stay at her establishment and must return to
    the workhouse. Before Oliver departs, Mrs. Mann
    gives him some bread and butter so that he will
    not seem too hungry at the workhouse.
  • One night at dinner, the children at the
    workhouse cast lots, determining that whoever
    loses shall be required to ask for more food for
    the boy. Oliver loses, and is to ask for more
    food at supper. His request so shocks the
    authorities that they offer five pounds as a
    reward to anyone who will take Oliver off of
    their hands.

10
Oliver Twist Chapter III
  • In the parish, Oliver has been flogged and then
    locked in a dark room as a public example.
  • Mr. Gamfield, a brutish chimney sweep, offers to
    take Oliver on as an apprentice. Because several
    boys have died under his supervision, the board
    considers five pounds too large a reward, and
    they settle on just over three pounds.
  • Mr. Bumble, Mr. Gamfield, and Oliver appear
    before a magistrate to seal the bargain. At the
    last minute, the magistrate notices Olivers
    pale, alarmed face. He asks the boy why he looks
    so terrified. Oliver falls on his knees and begs
    that he be locked in a room, beaten, killed, or
    any other punishment besides being apprenticed to
    Mr. Gamfield.
  • The magistrate refuses to approve the
    apprenticeship, and the workhouse authorities
    again advertise Olivers availability.

11
Outrage at injustice
  • Dickens attacked the social evils of his times
    such as poor houses, unjust courts, greedy
    management and the underworld.
  • Oliver Twist is an extreme criticism of Victorian
    societys treatment of the poor. In this part of
    the story, Dickens shows his outrage at injustice
    by describing the condition prevailing in the
    workhouse.
  • In the narrative, the workhouse functions as a
    sign of the moral hypocrisy of the working class.
    Mrs. Mann steals from the children in her care,
    feeding and clothing them inadequately.
    Workhouses were established to save the poor from
    starvation, disease, and filth, but in fact they
    end up visiting precisely those hardships on the
    poor.

12
Middle-class Hypocrisy Brutality
  • The assumption on the part of the middle-class
    characters that the lower classes are naturally
    base, criminal, and filthy serves to support
    their vision of themselves as a clean and morally
    upright social group. The gentlemen on the
    workhouse board call Oliver a savage who is
    destined for the gallows.
  • After Olivers outrageous request for more food,
    the board schemes to apprentice him to a brutal
    master, hoping that he will soon die.
  • So even when the upper classes claim to be
    alleviating the lower-class predicament, they
    only end up aggravating it. In order to save
    Oliver from what they believe to be his certain
    fate as a criminal, the board essentially ensures
    his early death by apprenticing him to a brutal
    employer.

13
Dickens Artistry
  • Dickens achieves his biting criticism of social
    conditions through deep satire and hyperbolic
    statements.
  • Throughout the novel, absurd characters and
    situations are presented as normal, and Dickens
    often says the opposite of what he really means.
  • For example, in describing the men of the parish
    board, Dickens writes that they were very sage,
    deep, philosophical men who discover about the
    workhouse that the poor people liked it! It was
    a regular place of public entertainment for the
    poorer classes a tavern where there was nothing
    to pay. . . .
  • Of course, we know that Olivers experience with
    the workhouse is anything but entertaining and
    that the men of the parish board are anything but
    sage, deep, or philosophical.

14
Dickens Humour
  • By making statements such as these, Dickens
    highlights the comical extent to which the upper
    classes are willfully ignorant of the plight of
    the lower classes.
  • Since paupers like Oliver stand no chance of
    defeating their tormenters, Dickens takes it upon
    himself to defeat them with sly humor that
    reveals their faults more sharply than a serious
    tone might have.
  • Though Oliver himself will never have much of a
    sense of humor, we will eventually meet other
    boys in his situation who will join Dickens in
    using humor as a weapon in their woefully unequal
    struggle with the society that oppresses them.

15
The Brontë sisters
  • Charlotte (1816-1855) Jane Eyre
  • Emily (1818-1848) Wuthering Heights
  • Anne Agnes Grey

16
The Brontë sisters
Charlotte, Emily and Anne all wrote successfully
in their short lives in Yorkshire and they all
wrote under pseudonyms. Jane Eyre and Wuthering
Heights are still popular today.
17
Charlotte Brontë
18
Jane Eyre --- The Story
  • Jane lives with her aunt who is rude and unjust
    to her and sends her to a charity school for poor
    girls, where she lives an intolerable life and
    stays for eight years.
  • Then Jane becomes a governess to a little girl in
    the family of a squire called Mr. Rochester. The
    squire falls in love with her.
  • While they are about to hold their wedding
    ceremony in the church, Jane learns that
    Rochester has got a wife who is mad.

19
Jane Eyre --- The Story
  • Shocked by the news, Jane flees from the house.
    She goes through many hardships. Finally helped
    by a parson, she gets the job of a teacher in a
    village school.
  • Meanwhile, a great misfortune befalls Mr.
    Rochester and he becomes blind. Hearing that Mr.
    Rochester has become penniless and disabled, Jane
    Eyre hurries back to him and becomes his wife.

20
Jane Eyre Chapter 5 - story
  • Jane leaves Gateshead by coach alone for Lowood.
    She is introduced to some of the school's daily
    routines (e.g., Bible recitations, regular
    academic lessons, and abominable meals) and
    sleeps in a room filled with other girls.
  • The next day she meets the kindly, beautiful
    superintendent, Miss Temple, and another girl,
    Helen Burns, who informs Jane that all the
    student are "charity-children".
  • One of the nastier teachers, Miss Scatcherd,
    mistreats Helen in class, though the stoic Helen
    impressively bears her punishment.

21
Jane Eyre Chapter Seven - story
  • Jane passes a difficult first quarter at Lowood,
    with both the snowy weather and strict
    environment contributing to her misery.
  • Mr. Brocklehurst visits Miss Temple's classroom
    and instructs her not to indulge the girls in the
    slightest way their privations will remind them
    of the Christian ethic.
  • He spots a girl with curly hair and deems it
    unacceptable for an evangelical environment, as
    are all the top-knots on the girls' heads.
  • Jane, nervous that Mr. Brocklehurst will convey
    Mrs. Reed's warnings about her behavior to Miss
    Temple, accidentally drops her slate. He
    chastises her in front of the class and three
    visiting fashionable ladies, telling everyone to
    ignore her the rest of the day, as she is a liar.
    Jane must stand on a stool in front of the class
    all day, with her only solace coming as Helen
    furtively smiles at her.

22
Bildungsroman
  • A novel of formation or a coming-of-age story ---
    the story of a childs maturation and focuses on
    the emotions and experiences that accompany and
    incite his or her growth to adulthood.
  • Such a novel takes the reader through a
    character's young adulthood as she defines her
    identity against forces of opposition.

23
Jane Eyre as Bildungsroman
  • In Jane Eyre, there are five distinct stages of
    development, each linked to a particular place
  1. Janes childhood at Gateshead
  2. her education at the Lowood School
  3. her time as Adeles governess at Thornfield

4?her time with the Rivers family at Morton and
at Marsh End (Moor House) 5 ?her reunion with and
marriage to Rochester at Ferndean.
  • From these experiences, Jane becomes the mature
    woman who narrates the novel retrospectively.

24
Themes of Jane Eyre
  • A completely new woman image.
  • The need for love contrasted with the need for
    independence

25
A completely new woman image
  • Jane Eyre represents those middle-class working
    women who are struggling for recognition of their
    basic rights and equality as a human being.

26
The need for love vs. the need for independence
  • Jane Eyre is very much the story of a quest to be
    loved. The main quest is Jane's search for her
    kindred spirits, for a sense of belonging and
    love, but her search is tempered by her need for
    independence ---
  • Jane searches, not just for romantic love, but
    also for a sense of being valued, of belonging.
  • Her fear of losing her autonomy motivates her
    refusal of Rochesters marriage proposal.

27
The need for love vs. the need for independence
  • Only when Jane gains financial and emotional
    autonomy, after having received her inheritance
    and the familial love of her cousins, can Jane
    accept Rochester's offer.
  • Only after proving her self-sufficiency to
    herself can she marry Rochester and not be
    asymmetrically dependent upon him as her
    master. The marriage can be one between equals.
  • With her marriage to Rochester, Jane finally
    feels completely liberated, bringing her dual
    quests for love and independence to a satisfying
    conclusion.

28
Emily Brontë
29
Wuthering Heights
  • The story is told through flashbacks recorded in
    diary entries, and events are often presented out
    of chronological order. Nevertheless, the novel
    contains enough clues to enable an approximate
    reconstruction of its chronology.
  • The novel deals with the love story between the
    hero Heathcliff who is a gipsy and Miss
    Catherine, the daughter of Heathcliffs
    benefactor.
  • Catherines brother Hindley considers it a shame
    on the family to let a gipsy marry his sister.
    Unable to bear the insult, Heathcliff leaves
    Wuthering Heights.

30
Wuthering Heights
  • Three years later he comes back and finds Cathy
    has already married. He resumes his lovemaking
    and she dies heart-broken.
  • Heathcliff becomes the master of the family and
    takes revenge upon the next generation. He treats
    Hindleys son Hareton very cruelly and compels
    Catherines daughter Cathy to marry his own
    sickly son. After his son dies Cathy falls in
    love with Hareton.
  • Finally Heathcliff sees the futility of revenge.

31
A Gothic Novel
  • The Gothic tradition a style of literature that
    featured supernatural encounters, crumbling
    ruins, moonless nights, and grotesque imagery,
    seeking to create effects of mystery and fear.
  • But Wuthering Heights transcends its genre in its
    sophisticated observation and artistic subtlety.
  • As a shattering presentation of the doomed love
    affair between the fiercely passionate Catherine
    and Heathcliff, it remains one of the most
    haunting love stories in all of literature.

32
Themes
  • The Destructiveness of a Love that Never Changes
  • The Conflict between Nature and Culture

33
The Destructiveness of a Love that Never Changes
  • Catherine and Heathcliffs love is rooted in
    their childhood and is marked by the refusal to
    change.
  • Catherine and Heathcliffs love is based on their
    shared perception that they are identical.
    Catherine declares, famously, I am Heathcliff,
    while Heathcliff, upon Catherines death, wails
    that he cannot live without his soul, meaning
    Catherine.

34
The Destructiveness of a Love that Never Changes
  • Given that Catherine and Heathcliffs love is
    based upon their refusal to change over time or
    embrace difference in others, it is fitting that
    the disastrous problems of their generation are
    overcome not by some climactic reversal, but
    simply by the inexorable passage of time, and the
    rise of a new and distinct generation.
  • Ultimately, Wuthering Heights presents a vision
    of life as a process of change, and celebrates
    this process over and against the romantic
    intensity of its principal characters.

35
The Conflict between nature and culture
  • In Wuthering Heights, Brontë constantly plays
    nature and culture against each other. Nature is
    represented by Cathy and Heathcliff who are
    governed by their passions, not by reflection or
    ideals of civility.
  • Wuthering Heights symbolizes a similar wildness.
    On the other hand, Thrushcross Grange and the
    Linton family represent culture, refinement,
    convention, and cultivation.

36
The Conflict between nature and culture
  • However, the influence of Wuthering Heights soon
    proves overpowering, and the inhabitants of
    Thrushcross Grange are drawn into Catherine,
    Hindley, and Heathcliffs drama.
  • Thus the reader may almost interpret Wuthering
    Heightss impact on the Linton family as an
    allegory for the corruption of culture by nature,
    creating a curious reversal of the more
    traditional story of the corruption of nature by
    culture.

37
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