"Victorian era fashion" Essays and Research Papers

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    Fueled by the frustration of the masculine control that dominated her era‚ Virginia Woolf displayed her deepest feelings of oppression in her essay “Professions for Women”. Written in 1931‚ “Professions for Women” shows the internal conflict many women battled fiercely with when living their everyday lives. Woolf tells a story of a figurative “Angel in the House”‚ which is a stereotypical woman of the Victorian era and her efforts to break free from this stereotypical template. Woolf felt that for

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    Child Labor: a Perspective

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    to end Child Labour By Robert Weissman (1997) * One world Guide on Child Labour * Report alleges Victoria ’s Secret linked to child labor (December15‚ 2011) CNN US news. * Child Prostitution By Louren Kotow * Sexual Abuse and Exploitation of Victorian Children (October 13‚ 2010) * Sadler Committee reports (1832) * CNN IBN report: More than 1 million children in India (May 11‚ 2009) * Statistics by ChildInfo.org * Lolita by Vladimir Nabarkov (1955) [ 7 ]. Stolen Youth: Brutalized children

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    Gender Roles In Jane Eyre

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    is meant to portray the negative consequences being controlled and suppressed by social norms can have on women. The class and age differences between the two characters serve as both an exaggeration and commentary on the extreme binary logic of Victorian gender relations. In Esther Godfrey’s article “Jane Eyre: Governess to Girl Bride‚” she attempts to examine the fact that in Jane Eyre gender identities and performances are increasingly tied to material wealth and social status. She then draws

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    diversity. The Victorian era ended in 1901 and along with it‚ so did the desire for uniformity. Families no longer felt the need to conform to every social construction and both women and men were more free to express themselves as individuals. In the 20th century‚ families became more modern and diverse‚ and the old ways of the Victorians were set aside to make room for originality and authenticity. The expectation of keeping your home orderly and uniform stems from as early as the Victorian Era. The Victorian

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    during the decline of the Victorian era and portrays the lifestyle of the era’s upper class in the author’s amusing point of view. While this was the era of supreme manners‚ well-educated men‚ and the utmost marriageable women‚ Oscar Wilde depicts his characters in a more truthful manner by revealing their contradicting statements and dishonest ways. Gwendolen‚ Cecily‚ and Lady Bracknell are the women in the play who are supposed to be the perfect representation of Victorian women‚ but their flaws are

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    Fashion of the Elizabethan Era The Elizabethan era was a time period centered around the life of Queen Elizabeth I’s reign (1558-1603). This period in time is considered the peak of English history and is the beginning of when people began to think and believe differently. That brought along changes in the way people dressed. How people‚ particularly rich ones‚ dressed was just another way for them to express themselves. Social classes are also very much prominent in the era. These social

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    social era and attitudes of her time. We see Chopin’s breeding ground for women in later times. These two short stories dealing with two women who decide to deal with their weakness or perhaps strengths by having more of a male attitude in both sexual and emotional degree. Chopin lived in the Southern United States in which she bases most of her stories‚ ‘The Storm’‚ was Biloxi on the Gulf Coast of the state of Mississippi. The period of her writing is generally regarded as the ‘Victorianera. In

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    alienating them from the characters they play." (Worthen‚ 807) The play takes part in two acts; in the first we see Clive‚ his family‚ friends‚ and servants in a Victorian British Colony in Africa; the second act takes place in 1979 London‚ but only twenty-five years have passed for the family. The choice to contrast the Victorian and Modern era becomes vitally important when analyzing this text from a materialist feminist view; materialist feminism relies heavily on history. Cloud Nine is a materialist

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    Jane Eyre Research Paper

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    Brontë’s Social Revolution In the novel Jane Eyre‚ author Charlotte Brontë emphasizes the religious aspect of life during the Victorian Era. Near the beginning of the preface Brontë states‚ “Conventionality is not morality. Self-righteousness in not religion”(Brontë‚ 1). With this statement‚ Brontë criticizes pseudo-religious manner in which many members of Victorian society live. She chastises her contemporaries for leading a life where empty words of justice and virtue are preceded by inconsistent

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    written by Oscar Wilde is set in England in the late Victorian era. Wilde uses obvious situational and dramatic irony within the play to satirize his time period. According to Roger Sale in “Being Ernest” the title has a double meaning to it and is certainly another example of satire used by Wilde. With a comedic approach‚ Wilde ridicules the absurdities of the character’s courtship rituals‚ their false faces‚ and their secrets (478). In the Victorian era‚ courtship rituals were slightly different from

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