The Victorian Period: the age of paradox - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The Victorian Period: the age of paradox

Description:

The Victorian Period: the age of paradox 1837-1901 Queen Victoria s Reign Age of Prosperity British Empire gained profits abroad Colonization of Africa, India for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1559
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: Instr244
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Victorian Period: the age of paradox


1
The Victorian Period the age of paradox
  • 1837-1901
  • Queen Victorias Reign

2
Age of Prosperity
  • British Empire gained profits abroad
  • Colonization of Africa, India for trade
  • Industrial Revolution produced affordable goods
  • Middle class developed
  • Education increased
  • Social mores revitalized
  • Period of peace, known as the Pax Britannica
  • Population doubled move to the cities
  • Advances in science, medicine, engineering

3
Introduction of the factory
4
Age of Buried Suffering
  • Industrial Rev. caused working class to suffer
    (child labor and sweat shops)
  • Colonization caused foreign conflict xenophobia
    and racism
  • Clash of ideals with French Revolution
  • Social mores oppressed women and Others
    (monstrosities)
  • Population increase meant more poor and sick
  • Fear of scientific discoveries and medicinal
    advancements
  • Religious strife and moral bias
  • Life of excessimmoral vs. pragmaticism and
    asceticismmoral (unreal expectationsfailure)

5
(No Transcript)
6
Victorian Identity (upper class) Women
  • Change in arranged marriage created some stress
  • Career was Angel of the House wife, mother,
    daughter
  • Should be artistically trained, talented,
    charming, pure, demure, humble, beautiful,
    classically educated, dutiful, weak, helpless,
    emotional to compete with other women
  • Sexism hysteria comes from the root hyst, or
    uterus (Freud)
  • 1887 the Married Woman's Property Act
  • Until 1887, women could not own property, even if
    inherited
  • If/when separated from husband, she forfeited
    property and had no rights to her children she
    would be ostracized

7
The Victorian Woman
8
Victorian Identity Sexuality
  • Prudery and repression of animalistic desires
  • Freud (id, ego, superego)
  • Marriage and purity
  • Courtship dowries double standards, love vs.
    class
  • Euphemisms
  • limb for leg expecting for pregnant
  • Rampant prostitution

9
Victorian Identity Poor
  • Poor Law (Social Welfare) 1832
  • Dangerous/difficult working conditions
  • Workhouses and Unions
  • Living wage (min wage) 30 shillings a week
  • Anti-Poor Law Movement
  • Orphans and Orphanages
  • Debtors prisons
  • Prostitution
  • Education
  • Introduction of ragged schools (free schools)

10
Medicine and Science
  • Hypnosis 1841
  • Ether 1846
  • Anesthetized
  • surgery 1840s
  • Plaster casts 1852
  • Cocaine 1856
  • Darwins Origin of Species 1869
  • Freud and psychoanalysis 1880s

11
Industrialism and Innovation
  • Steam Locomotive1802
  • Daguerreotype Photography 1824
  • Telegraph 1838
  • Electric lights used in public 1846
  • Sewing Machine 1851
  • Refrigeration 1859
  • Motion Pictures 1890

12
Victorian Art and Aesthetics
  • Literature/poetry consider impractical lies
  • Victorian industrialist was pragmatic and
    efficient
  • The search for objective beauty perfect form
  • Realism truth to nature
  • Photography, representationalism, portraits
  • Rebellious Pre-Raphaelites art for arts sake

13
Victorian Religious Conflict
  • Evangelicals (middle class ethos) vs.
    objective, scientific thought
  • Happiness earned through hard work and
    self-denial
  • Conformity
  • Darwin crisis

14
Darwinism and Society
  • Survival of the fittest
  • Originate from ape? Animalistic nature?
  • Social Darwinismwork harder?
  • 1872 Origin of Species
  • 1886 Robert Louis Stevenson, Strange Case
  • 1891 Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

15
Literature Timeline
  • 1813 Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice
  • 1818 Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
  • 1843 Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol
  • 1847 Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights
  • 1865 Lewis CarrolI, Alice in Wonderland
  • 1883 Robert Louis Stevenson, Treasure Island
  • 1891 Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray
    Arthur Conan Doyle, The Adventures of Sherlock
    Holmes
  • 1895 Oscar Wilde, The Importance
  • 1886 Robert Louis Stevenson, Strange Case
  • 1897 Bram Stoker, Dracula
  • 1902 Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com