Wilde’s Advocacy for Change in Victorian Culture People have the tendency to judge situations and matters according to how society judges the same situation. Oscar Wilde‚ the playwright of The Importance of Being Earnest‚ takes these preconceptions in and inverts the practices that we perceive to be true in order to advocate social and political change. By emphasizing these discrepancies in marriage and the social aristocracy‚ Wilde satirizes Victorian traditions and ultimately advocates change.
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Tennyson’s “Ulysses”--- The Representative of Victorian Times Tennyson‚ (1809-1892) a great literary titan‚ is the representative poet of Victorian Age and mirrors the most vital problem of industrial and moral life – “religious doubts‚ social problems‚ the revolt of the cultured mind against a corrupt society‚ pride in a far-flung Empire‚ the spirit of compromise so characteristic of the Victorian period”. He was‚ thus‚ a truly national poet and from a nationalistic view-point declares;
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Preface‚ "The Picture of Dorian Gray" The Victorian Period revolves around the political career of Queen Victoria. She was crowned in 1837 and died in 1901 (which put a definite end to her political career). A great deal of change took place during this period--brought about because of the Industrial Revolution; so it’s not surprising that the literature of the period is often concerned with social reform. "The common perception of the period is the Victorians are “prudish‚ hypocritical‚ stuffy‚ [and]
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is used by Wilde as an advantage to portray the upperclass. Upon hearing Jack and Gwendolen’s engagement‚ Lady Bracknell asks him‚ “[…] Do you smoke?” It is quite peculiar that her first thought was to inquire whether or not Jack smokes. In the Victorian times‚ true aristocrats had the reputation of not having to work often‚ meaning they had an extensive amount of free time. Her demeanour and management of the situation revealed that she is serious about intermingling between the social classes.
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It is a normal day in Victorian England‚ I and my family wake up‚ and do what we usually do‚ go to work. Once I got to work‚ my boss assigned me to a new chimney. It was a normal day of cleaning‚ until I spot a girl out of the corner of my eye. I get lowered down to the bottom‚ and I introduce myself. After we both introduce ourselves‚ I find out her name is Kate‚ Kate Dickens‚ the third child of Charles Dickens. I was shocked‚ I was standing in front of Charles Dickens daughter. I tell her I have
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"The Victorian elements in Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontё" The Victorian Era‚ in which Brontё composed Wuthering Heights‚ receives its name from the reign of Queen Victoria of England. The era was a great age of the English novel‚ which was the ideal form to descibe contemporary life and to entertain the middle class. Emily‚ born in 1818‚ lived in a household in the countryside in Yorkshire‚ locates her fiction in the worlds she knows personally. In addition‚ she makes the novel even more personal
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Cynthia J. Smith ENG 322 Dr. Rachel Carnell Final Essay May 1st‚ 2012 Nancy- a Complex Representation of a Victorian Fallen Woman In Victorian England‚ Charles Dickens’s novel Oliver Twist was well received and became popular literature. Many of the characters in Oliver Twist were the most degraded of London’s inhabitants‚ so Dickens was careful to consider the manners of the age and intentionally avoided naming Nancy as a prostitute‚ and was vague about the deeds of the criminal element
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“Byronic hero“ and his evolution within the Victorian literature Lord Byron is one of the most famous and influential writers of the Romantic period and literature overall‚ which is largely due to his evermore interesting type of hero. Inspired by Milton ’s Satan‚ Byron took over the figure of heroic character and perfected it in his poem Childe Harold into a figure which has thereafter become known as the “Byronic hero“. Many critics agree that Byron ’s inspiration for this character lies largely
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The Victorian era and the early twentieth century idealised the Elizabethan era. The Encyclopædia Britannica still maintains that "The long reign of Elizabeth I‚ 1558-1603‚ was England’s Golden Age...’Merry England‚’ in love with life‚ expressed itself in music and literature‚ in architecture‚ and in adventurous seafaring."[1] This idealising tendency was shared by Britain and an Anglophilic America. (In popular culture‚ the image of those adventurous Elizabethan seafarers was embodied in the films
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L. Huff Mr. Bounds AP Language 23 January 2012 William Thackeray: An Era without Morals The Victorian Era was the great age of the English novel—realistic‚ thickly plotted‚ crowded with characters‚ and long. It was the ideal form to describe contemporary life and to entertain the middle class. William Makepeace Thackeray is best known for Vanity Fair (1848)‚ which wickedly satirizes hypocrisy and greed (Victorian). In the novel‚ almost none of the characters who act badly or do wrong are
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