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Victorian Viewpoints

Victorian Viewpoints • Periodicals offered nonfiction articles on all manner of subjects. • England’s thinkers clashed over issues of the day. • Uncertainty permeated literature of the late Victorian period. • Naturalist writers saw the universe as an uncaring force, indifferent to human suffering. • Readers turned to escapist fare.
Victorians’ love of reading was by no means limited to fiction. The same periodicals that provided them with the most recent novel installment by Trollope, Thackeray, or Dickens also offered articles and essays on every imaginable subject, “from Arctic exploration to pinmaking,” as one scholar put it. Victorians were generalists, curious about all aspects of their changing world, and they read for pleasure the sort of nonfiction that today might appeal only to specialists in a particular academic field.

A great deal of this nonfiction was not merely informational but conveyed strong opinions. In carefully worded prose that was at once impassioned and a model of restraint, England’s greatest thinkers clashed over the issues of the day. While some, like Thomas Babington Macaulay,defended the status quo, most found much to criticize in Victorian society—though few went as far as Thomas Carlyle,who in his book Past and Present predicted bloody revolution as the inevitable result of the social breakdown caused by unregulated, profit-driven industry.

Whatever their viewpoint, these critics’ authoritative tone must have been reassuring to a readership no longer sure what to think about anything. Could science and religious belief coexist, or would one destroy the other? Did British imperialism benefit both conqueror and conquered, or was it a disastrous mistake? Would the Industrial Revolution prove to be the dawning of a great new age or the end of civilization? Increasingly, the optimism of the early years of the era turned to uneasiness in the face of what Tennysoncalled “the thoughts that shake mankind.”

This uneasiness permeated the literature written during the last years of Victoria’s reign. Poets no longer contemplated life at a romantic distance but instead expressed their sense of loss and pain at living in a world in which order had been replaced by chaos and confusion. In his poem Dover Beach, Matthew Arnolddescribes a bright “sea of faith” retreating to the edges of the earth, leaving humanity stranded in darkness. Pessimistic themes also permeated the poetry and fiction of Thomas Hardy,who wrote in a new style called naturalism.An offshoot of realism, naturalism saw the universe as an uncaring force, indifferent to human suffering. Naturalist writers packed their novels with the harsh details of industrialized life, unrelieved by humor or a happy ending.

Not surprisingly, late Victorian readers began to avoid serious literature, finding it depressingly bleak. Instead, they turned to the adventure tales of Rudyard Kipling,who set his tales in India; the witty drawing-room comedies of Oscar Wilde;the science fiction of H.G. Wells;or the detective stories of Arthur Conan Doyle,whose Sherlock Holmes was England’s first fictional detective. Along with children’s literature that included Lewis Carroll’sAlice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Robert Louis Stevenson’sTreasure Island, such wonderfully written escapist fare rounded out the great diversity of Victorian literary voices.



In the end, the pessimism of Hardy and Arnold came the closest to anticipating what lay just around the bend: the catastrophe of World War I. In the next century, modernist writers would pick up the torch from their Victorian predecessors and grapple with issues the Victorians could not have imagined.

 


Date: 2016-03-03; view: 847


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