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THE VICTORIAN NOVEL

THE VICTORIAN NOVEL. Giorgia Moro 5^B. Characteristics of the Victorian Novel. Birth and influence in society Themes Settings Language Narrator The anti-victorian novel. 1840 The industrial civilization had reached a state of acute, generalized crisis .

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THE VICTORIAN NOVEL

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  1. THE VICTORIAN NOVEL Giorgia Moro 5^B

  2. Characteristics of the Victorian Novel • Birth and influence in society • Themes • Settings • Language • Narrator • The anti-victorian novel

  3. 1840 The industrial civilization had reached a state of acute, generalized crisis. The middle class and the working class began to have some contrast Novels began to have a real impact on legislators, opinion formers and those who could vote. According to the reaction of people novelists changes their way of writing To write a novel became an industry itself

  4. Clash between classes: the logic of Utilitarism Coketown by C. Dickens: “ it was a town of machinery”, “tall chimneys”, “a river that run purple” “these attributes of coke town were mainly inseparable from the work by which it was sustained”. • Children exploitation Vanity Fair by W. M. Thackeray : “I have been treated worse than a servant in the kitchen”; “I have been made to tend the little girl in the lower schoolroom”. Oliver Twist by C. Dickens : “Oliver Twist and his companion suffered the tortures of slow starvation for three month”; “the master aimed a blow at Oliver’s head with the laddle, pinioned him in his arm ..” • Education Nicolas Nickleby by C. Dickens : “go and look after my horse, and rub him down well, or I’ll rub you down”.

  5. Industry  place where desperation and alienation born.ù Coketown by C.D. : “ it was a town of red brick”; “ the solitary exception was the New Church; a stuccoed edifice with a square steeple over the door”. • School  the most evident scene where the clash between classes and the exploitation of children take place. Nicholas Nickelby by C. D.: “After this, there was an other hour of crouching the school room and shivering with cold, and than school began again.” Nicholas Nickelby : “ he dismissed the first class to their experiments in practical philosophy, and eyed Nicholas with a look, half cunning and half doubtful..”

  6. Pathos: narrative technique that produces feelings of sadness and sympathy in the reader. • Grotesque: rhetorical figure in which objects are exaggerated in order to create caricature. • Mr. Bounderby by C. Dickens: “a man with a great puffed head..” • Hyperbolic use of language: exaggerations entertain the reader. Mr. Bounderby by C. Dickens: “ he was a rich man: banker, merchant, manufacture, and what not”. Thanks to these aspects the writer can criticize the reader and some aspects of the Victorian society in an indirect way

  7. Language of sense impression Coketown by C. Dickens :“ it was a town of red brick”; “black canal”; “rattling and trembling”; “ill-smelling dye”. • Metaphor Coketown : “..out of which an interminable serpent of smoke trailed themselves for ever and ever”. • Repetition Coketown : “at the same hours, with the same sound upon the same pavements, to do the same work, and to whom every day was the same as yesterday and tomorrow”. Mr. Bounderby by C. Dickens: “ I was one of the most…, I was so sickly, that I was always…, I was so ragged”. The reader can creates a mental picture of the scene but also can smell and hear the alienated world of the Victorian age.

  8. Third person narrator OMINISCENT INTRUSIVE The writer knows everything The writer wants to about society . involved the reader in in the narration. “our”-”we”

  9. Jude the Obscure- T. Hardy- Part six, chapter 2 Plot: Jude is time the eggs while he is waiting Sue, her lovers, and their children. Children do not arrive so he goes upstairs and finds three of them hanged on three hooks. They have decided to die because they are “too many”. Characteristic of the extract: • Jude= name taken from the catholic world. It means cheater. The choice of this name is based on the wedding’s value in the Victorian age. As a matter of fact Sue is not Jude’s real wife. Hardy wants to underline this aspect. • “Done because wee are too many”: these worlds seem to be tell by an adult instead a child. It is in line with the philosophy of Darwinism in which the stronger wins. This thought might never be associated with a childish mind. Commit suicide also is a extreme act that only an old person can do pushed by his will. • “it was in his nature to do this” : the doctor says that it was written that the child will be probably commit suicides because it is in his nature. Hardy uses the figure of the doctor in order to represent the middle class’ philosophy of Darwinism.

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