UVU Victorian Literature (Fall 2018) Dashboard

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This group is a collaborative effort of the members of Utah Valley University's "Victorian Literature" class. It will include a timeline, map, and blog posts related to our course materials. For our timeline, we will place a selection of key political, social, and historical events in conversation with our course texts. Timeline events will be chosen for their relevance to the content and context of our readings. These events will be complemented by a brief blog post/annotation exploring the relationship between literary and cultural history. Our map will help us visualize the spatial relation between our timeline events and course texts. 

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Individual Entries

Chronology Entry
Posted by Michaela Jensen on Wednesday, October 31, 2018 - 12:40
Blog entry
Posted by Madison Holling... on Monday, October 22, 2018 - 17:28

Rodrigo Borgia was elected Pope on August 11, 1492 and retained the papacy until his death in 1503. He most likely bribed his way into gaining the papacy. His elevation in status allowed him to elevate his illegitmate children as well. The most famous of these children being Juan, Cesare, and Lucrezia. Juan was murdered shortly after his father became Pope - probably because of a sexual liasion with the wrong woman. It is Cesare and Lucrezia who have perhaps received the most infamous reputations over history. Although Lucrezia was probably just trying to survive in a very public and sometimes hated family she has been painted over the years as a poisoner, a murderer, and a witch. She was married three times with her first marraige being dissolved on the grounds on non-consummation despite the fact that her husband's first wife had died in childbirth. Her second husband was killed on the orders of her brother Cesare - partly out of jealousy. She had numerous love affairs, and it...

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Chronology Entry
Posted by Madison Holling... on Monday, October 22, 2018 - 17:01
Chronology Entry
Posted by Katelynn Morrow on Monday, October 15, 2018 - 21:01
Blog entry
Posted by Michaela Jensen on Monday, October 15, 2018 - 13:36

Many of the colonial values seen in the life of Livingstone are reflected in the character of St. John Rivers, the pastor-turned-missionary of Jane Eyre.  For example, in an early appeal, the London Missionary society asked for “messengers to the nations . . . to entreat [the foreigners] that they turn from their dumb idol to the living God, and to wait for His Son from heaven.” Similarly, Rivers says his “great work” is to give “religion for superstition, the hope of heaven for the fear of hell” (471).

However, what is particularly telling is the hybrid of imperialistic and religious goals that are conflated in Livingstone’s work and similarly reflected through the character of St. John Rivers.  There is a sense that the missionary work and the exploration and expansion of Britain go hand in hand—and thus colonialism is endorsed by God. Livingstone himself writes that he was driven by the words of another missionary who said that in Africa was “the smoke of a...

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Chronology Entry
Posted by Michaela Jensen on Monday, October 15, 2018 - 13:32
Blog entry
Posted by Madison Holling... on Thursday, October 11, 2018 - 17:49

On the night of June 29, 1860 3 and 1/2 year old Francis Savile Kent was found brutally murdered. His nursemaid was first indicted for the crime, but no evidence was found to convict her. Soon after his 16 year old half-sister Constance Kent was held for questioning, but was let go. Constance was seen as something of a folk heroine and the police were criticized for accusing an accomplished, intelligent, and upper class lady for the murder. Constance later confessed to killing Francis in 1865. Constance told police she had had nothing against the boy, but had done it to get back at her step-mother. Her step-mother had been a governess in the family while Constance's mother was still alive, and had then married Constance's father shortly after his wife died. Even after she confessed many people still refused to believe she was guilty and instead believed she was covering for her father. This was the result of many people having a hard time believing that a pretty, young, high-class...

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Chronology Entry
Posted by Madison Holling... on Thursday, October 11, 2018 - 17:16
Chronology Entry
Posted by Kelsie Tylka on Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - 22:57
Blog entry
Posted by Kelsie Tylka on Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - 22:49

This poem extols the virtues of an ideal woman during Victorian times. Coventry Patmore wrote this poem to memorialize his deceased wife, Emily. It chronicles a young, virtuous woman’s life from youth to marriage and all that a man should expect from their devoted wives. This poem was published in four installations in 1858, but didn’t gain popularity until later in 19th century. This popularity made it a common fixture in Victorian libraries. The term “Angel in the home” became a universal term for women of this era.

Some of the most memorable lines refer to the woman and are characteristics. In Canto IV The Morning Call he mentions:

  How artless in her very art;
How candid in discourse; how sweet
     The concord of her lips and heart;
How simple and how circumspect;
     How subtle and how fancy-free;
Though sacred to her love, how deck'd
     With unexclusive courtesy;
How quick in talk to see from far...

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