victorian era cultural values reflected in literature

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VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

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Page 1: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

VICTORIAN ERA

Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Page 2: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Queen Victoria

Page 3: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Victorian Family Life

Page 4: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Victorian Parlor

Page 5: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Victorian People

Page 6: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Victorian Home

Page 7: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

INTRODUCTION TO THE VICTORIAN ERA

• Named after Queen Victoria of Great Britain (reigned 1837-1901)

• During this time there is a rise of middle class people and professions

• Houses were a symbol of growing wealth and importance through the decoration outside and inside the house

• People move out of city centers and the suburbs are born in this era

• Women are the keepers of the home and the teachers of moral values to children

Page 8: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

RISE OF THE MIDDLE CLASS:

During Victorian Era the middle class expanded and its control of political, social and cultural issues increased. Middle class consisted of people who did not work with their hands, earned a predictable salary, and could afford to buy a home.

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Page 9: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

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Middle class included: doctors, lawyers, ministers, skilled craftsman, teachers,

businessmen, bankers, newspaper editors, settled farmers, managers, clerks, white-

collar workers, etc.

About half the population in an average city belonged to the middle class.

RISE OF THE MIDDLE CLASS:

Page 10: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Due to availability of inexpensive manufactured goods, the Victorian middle class could afford to copy the manners of the

more prosperous members of the previous generation

3RISE OF THE MIDDLE CLASS:

Page 11: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Members of the upper and middle classes expected their houses to convey meaning, i.e.,

a message which observers could easily understand.

Messages, portrayed by the elaborateness or simplicity of the home’s design, included the wealth, class status, virtue, and taste of the

owner, as well as the importance of family life.

THE HOUSE AS A SYMBOL:4

Page 12: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Wealth and its display (through home decoration and the amassing of consumer goods) became the most important factor in evaluating success. Specific architectural styles also relayed messages. For example:

Gothic Revival = owner of English descent romance, chivalry

Italianate = a cultured and artistic household

THE HOUSE AS A SYMBOL:5

Page 13: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

THE VICTORIAN WOMAN:

Middle class Victorians believed in separate spheres of activity for males and females. Men were assigned to the work place, while women were to influence home and family. (This belief did not extend to the lower class, whose women often had to work outside the home.)

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Page 14: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

This belief system stressed:Home as sanctuary for the family

Woman as teacher of moral and spiritual values

Through the decoration of the home, woman as teacher of artistic merit and taste

Home as place of woman’s care and labor

7 THE VICTORIAN WOMAN:

Page 15: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

Eventually, middle class women were morally (although not legally) prohibited from participating in most activities outside of the home. Whatever leisure time they might have was restricted to visiting, handicrafts, church and charitable activities, car parties, book clubs, etc.

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THE VICTORIAN WOMAN:

Page 16: VICTORIAN ERA Cultural Values Reflected in Literature

“An obsessive and self-conscious decorating and collecting frenzy resulted when women were cut off from participation in the world and made the guardian of the family’s aesthetic and moral well-being.” (Elan and Susan Zingman-Leith. The Secret Life of Victorian Houses. p. 36)

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THE VICTORIAN WOMAN: