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Olena Tupakhina
tupakhina@gmail.com
Tutorial hours:
Monday, 13:00 –
14:30 (room 307)
Deadline for group projects: December 26,
2016
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What does “Victorian” actually mean?
What’s so special
about Victorian age?
Why do Victorians still matter?
The Victorians
in the Rearview Mirror
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Top 10 Things Associated with Victorian
Prudery
Sexual restraint and
repression
Family values
Progress and Technology
Gentleman’s Code
Hard Work
Tidiness
“Angel
in the House”
Imperialism and Colonialism
Duty and Self-command
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What does “Victorian” actually mean?
…We never really encounter
“the Victorians” themselves but instead a mediated image like
the one we get when we glance into our rearview mirrors while driving. The image usefully condenses the paradoxical sense of looking forward to see what’s behind us… It also suggests something of the inevitable distortion that accompanies any mirror image, whether we see it as resulting from the effects of political ideology, deliberate misreading, exaggeration or the understandable simplification of a complex past.
Simon Joyce. Victorians in the Rearview Mirror
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Queen Victoria
Family values protector - notoriously disenchanted
by pregnancy and childbirth, calling it the “shadow-side of
marriage”;
England’s most beloved queen - survived 6 serious assassination attempts;
Patron of Victorian literature and science – nonreader with quite primitive tastes;
The most powerful woman of the world – objected to «this mad, wicked folly of ‘Women’s Rights»
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Victorian = Relating to Victoria’s Rule?
“Nobody takes 1837
– 1901 seriously” (Richard Price)
1836 – Dickens’s “The
Pickwick Papers” published
1832 – Reform Act
1815 – Napoleon defeated
“Long XIX century” (1780 – 1901) instead of “Victorian Era”?
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When did the Victorian Era really end?
“The Victorian
Era has definitely closed” (C.F.G. Masterman, 1901)
“On or about
December 1910 human character changed” (Virginia Woolf, 1924)
“The war of 1914 destroyed a new, and civilized or semi-civilized, way of life which had established itself or was establishing itself all over Europe” (Leonard Woolf, 1964)
“The decisive shift in the national character had begun in the early years of George V’s reign” (George Dangerfield, 1935)
“My contemporaries were all brought up in some degree of the nineteenth century, since the twentieth did not begin till 1945” (John Fowles, 1977)
“Наконец, и Россия вошла в ХХ век. Викторианская эра кончилась” (Иосиф Бродский, 1992)
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Which connotations has the term “Victorian” acquired?
1850-ies
– progressive, innovative, powerful (The Great Exhibition)
1870-ies –
oppressive and strict (E.C. Stedman’s “The Victorian Poets”, 1876)
1910-ies – “Horror Victorianorum”: old-fashioned, regressive and dull (The Bloomsbury Group)
1940-ies – solid, consistent, naïve
1950-ies – nostalgic turn to “good old days”
1970-ies – Thatcher’s rehabilitation of Victorian values: patriotic, hard-working, self-dependent, rational, inventive, moral
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Social improvements
Colonial expansion
Development of Science and Technologies
The Great Exhibition
1851:
Proud to be Victorian!
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Great Britain After WWII
Lost all the colonies;
Lost 7/8
of its trade fleet;
Lost positions as world’s first
political power to the U.S.
“The Age of Austerity” (1945 – 50-ies)
Northern Ireland Crisis in 1960-ies
Trade and public sector union strikes in 1970-ies
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Longing for power;
Struggle for “Englishness”;
Campaign against “permissiveness”;
Necessity to cut down social expenses by turning to
laissez-faire economy
1983:
I was asked whether I was trying to restore ‘Victorian values.’ I said straight out, yes I was. And I am.
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Victorian Values
I was brought up by a Victorian
grandmother. You were taught to work jolly hard, you
were taught to improve yourself, you were taught self-reliance, you were taught to live within your income, you were taught that cleanliness was next to godliness. You were taught self-respect, you were taught always to give a hand to your neighbour, you were taught tremendous pride in your country, you were taught to be a good member of your community. All of these things are Victorian values. [...] They are also perennial values as well.
Margaret Thatcher, 1983
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Are We the New Victorians?
“Victorian culture was as
rich and difficult and complex and pleasurable as our
own; the Victorians shaped our lives and sensibilities in countless unacknowledged ways; they are still with us, walking our pavements, drinking in our bars, living in our houses, reading our newspapers, inhabiting our bodies”
(Matthew Sweet. Inventing the Victorians)
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Victorian Era
as a Matrix of Modern World
Multiculturalism
Globalization
Arms
and drugs trafficking
Mass-production
IT and communications
Marxism
Feminism
Fashion
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School of the XXI century: Victorian vision
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Neil Kinnock, Labour Party leader
(1983 – 1992)
1985:
Victorian Britain was a place where a few got
rich and most got hell. The 'Victorian values' that ruled were cruelty, misery, drudgery, squalor and ignorance.
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Trauma-Generating Experiences
of Victorian Era
Class and gender stereotypes
Xenophobia
Racism
Child abuse
Homophobia
Skin trade
Fear of extinction
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Nachträglichkeit
Afterwardsness - a mode of belated understanding or retroactive
attribution of sexual or traumatic meaning to earlier events;
Victorian
Revival both compensates “historical” traumas from the XIX century and projects modern concerns into the past as if to disassociate the modern consciousness from them