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    Victorian Novel

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    THE VICTORIAN NOVEL SPIS TREŚCI INTRODUCTION 1 I THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NOVEL 2 II KEY AUTHORS 3 III KEY TEXTS 3 IV TOPICS 3 INTRODUCTION Many associate the word “Victorian” with images of over-dressed ladies and snooty gentlemen gathered in reading rooms. The idea of “manners” does sum up the social climate of middle-class England in the nineteenth century. However‚ if there is one transcending aspect to Victorian England life and society‚ that aspect is change. Nearly every institution of society

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    victorian novel

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    The Victorian Novel: main characteristics First of all in the Victorian Age the dominating literary form was the novel. It was in fact easier to be read and understood by simple people‚ its plot was more interesting  than any other literary forms‚ the main protagonists of the novel were the same people who read it so that they felt deeply involved in the adventure told‚ the writer and his readers shared the same opinions‚ values and ideals because they belonged to the same middle class‚ the setting

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    Thigpen and H.M. Checkley wrote The Three Faces of Eve‚ loosely based on one of their patients‚ and popularized the term "Split Personality." This condition‚ more formally known as Dissociative Identity Disorder‚ continues to capture the imagination of many people through movies such as "Me‚ Myself‚ and Irene‚" but it was much earlier that the idea of multiple personalities in one body entered popular culture. Robert Louis Stevenson wrote The Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in the nineteenth

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    Women in Victorian Novels

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    Women in Victorian Novels The ideas and standards that are set with being a proper Victorian woman are starting to become questioned. Through these novels there are subtle hints portrayed throughout the book of women being able to make their own choices and finally have their own independence. Some women choose to take the opportunity and have a say while others still abide by the Victorian way.   Louis J Boyle Victorian Writers 30 April 2013

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    victorian novel & poetry

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    Victorian Age The beginning of the Victorian Period is dated sometimes as 1832 (the passage of the first Reform Bill) and sometimes as 1837 (the accession of Queen Victoria). It extends to the death of Victoria in 1901. But when we refer the history book of W. J. Long and literary terms of M. H. Abraham‚ we find that the period between 1850 -1900 is regarded as the Victorian Period‚ which is also known as the Age of Compromise and the Age of Peace and Prosperity. When Victoria came on the

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    The Victorian Novel: main features First of all in the Victorian Age the dominating literary form was the novel. It was in fact easier to be read and understood by simple people‚ its plot was more interesting than any other literary forms‚ the main protagonists of the novel were the same people who read it so that they felt deeply involved in the adventure told‚ the writer and his readers shared the same opinions‚ values and ideals because they belonged to the same middle class‚ the setting was

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    Raskolnikov: A Dual or Split Personality Prior to this novel‚ Dostoevsky had used characters whose personalities were dual ones. However‚ it is not until this novel that he exposes the reader to a full study of the split personality. Raskolnikov’s dual personality is the controlling idea behind the murder and behind his punishment. Raskolnikov is used as a representative of the modern young Russian intellectual whose fate is intricately bound up in the fate of Russia herself. Therefore‚ the story

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    The Bildungsroman Genre. The narrative mode Dickens has adopted aligns his novel with the Bildungsroman genre of literature. The term Bildungsroman is a German word meaning ’novel of formation’ or ’education novel’. A Bildungsroman novel frequently puts an emphasis on the moral and psychological development of its protagonist. Morality is an important theme in Great Expectations‚ one of the episodes of Great Expectations which illustrates the conventions of the Bildungsroman form is the story’s

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    the human mind. Theories can be explained through Sigmund Freud’s scientific analysis and experiments. His theory of repression is expressed by the parts of the human mind: id‚ ego‚ and superego. Complications of the mind are responsible for split personality and dual nature of man which allows contradicting natures to coexist in one man. In the novella‚ The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde‚ by Robert Balfour Louis Stevenson‚ the intricate malfunctions in the human mind are explored through

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    In ‘Industrial Culture and the Victorian Novel’ Joseph W. Childers highlights the role of information to the industrialism in Britain in the early Victorian period. Information was crucial to understand the structure of the industrial culture. Moreover‚ widely accepted ideas were starting to be questioned and as Childers points out people ‘were existing differently’. Accordingly‚ novelists as Gaskell‚ Dickens‚ Disraeli‚ Kingsley‚ and Frances Trollope provide specific examples of progress. Childers

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