Name______Date______Class ______
Victorian Literature 1837-1901
Literary History: Victorian Notes
Essential Questions /- Romanticism
- The Romantics ______Victorian writing.
- Many Early Victorian novels blend ______and ______.
- Realism
- Realism sought to capture ______life as it really was lived.
- Realism focused on the effects of the ______Revolution, which often brought ______.
- ______focused on the inner realities of the mind.
- Naturalism
- Viewed nature and society as forces ______to human suffering.
- Naturalism created characters who are ______of their environment and internal drives beyond their control.
- It is an extreme and ______offshoot of realism that believes everything is explainable by natural and physical causes.
Summary
Essential Questions /
- Storytellers
- ______was the era’s most popular storyteller. He wrote entertaining novels with farfetched plots that nevertheless exposed real ______problems.
- The Bronte sisters wrote ______plots with Byronic heroes set against real and wild British landscapes.
- Popular writers created a pleasing sense of ______and worked to inspire change or ______behavior.
Summary
Essential Questions /
- Novels
- Novels were VERY ______and often published as a series in magazines for the growing ______class.
- Victorian emphasis on family life created a popularity in ______literature like Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass.
- Sir Author Doyle created detective Sherlock Holmes.
- Rudyard Kipling made the ______story popular with his tales of British Imperialism in India.
- Poetry
- Poetry ______during the Victorian age.
- Lord Alfred Tennyson became poet laureate with musical public verse.
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning produced a bestseller with a volume ______poems to her husband.
- Pre-Raphaelite poets such as Dante Rossetti and his sister Christina wrote against Victorian ______and worked to bring back the clarity of medieval ______style.
- Later in the era, Thomas Hardy and A.E. Houseman wrote with ______while Gerald Manley Hopkins experimented with rhythm.
- Drama
- The Victorian Era is not known for its drama.
- Oscar Wilde wrote ______in the late 1890’s often associated with the time and its middle class.
- Most popular stage works of the period are really ______that ridicule social pretense.
Summary of Victorian Literature
1. The ______was compared to the Internet as a new medium of ______that could benefit society.
2. English writers began to see the novel as a form of ______that had the ability to affect the lives of people from all works of life.
3. At one time, the novel was viewed primarily as a form of ______.
4. In the mid-18th century, the novel saw the development of both ______and ______.
5. The Victorian period is also called “ the ______”.
6. Victorians wanted to document the lives and the ______.
7. The novel became a tool for exposing ______.
8. ______works detailed the troubling state of England’s lower classes.------
19th Century’s sub-genres
1. Historical Novels: combined historical facts with ______to re-create the spirit of a past age.
2. ______was based on historical accounts of the ______.
3. Gothic Novels: horror tales became ______in England near the turn of the 19th century.
4. ______represents the best example of ______.
5. Detective Novels: mystery is a major ingredient of ______.
6. ______was the world’s most famous detective.
7. Newgate Novels: stories that focused on ______and their motives.
8. These novels explored the nature of crime and ______.
9. ______was about the effects of ______unrest and riot on the lives of a host of characters.
10. Naturalism replaced ______in or around 1880.
11. Naturalistic writing attempted to depict the human condition as objectively as ______depicted the process of nature.
12. Thomas Hardy portrayed a hostile world in which only the “______”.