What do you think when you hear the Victorian era? One of your first ideas may be Queen Victoria himself, one of the longest dominant monarchs in British history. You might think about the buildings and houses that were popular in that age. Like many people, you may believe that the Victorian era is part of progress and progress. this is true. There was much progress in the Victorian era. For example, between 1809 and 1839, exports increased from 25.4 pounds to 76 million pounds.
Queen Victoria ruled the British colony and the Queen of India. Through the Victorian era British imperialism and British culture had an impact. The role of women in colonial countries depends on the loyalty of loyalty and expectations of their symbolic cultural standards. During the Victorian period, the upper classes of Canada were almost exclusively British. At the beginning of the Victorian era, North America consisted of several independent colonies that forged together in 1867 to create Canada. Military and government officials and their families came from Great Britain or Scotland to Great Britain North America and few to Protestant Ireland. Most commercial interests are dominated by Canadians of British stocks.
Racial discrimination was particularly prominent in the 17th and 18th century colonial era when North American colonies became part of the world British Empire. Traditionally, British people have combined brown skin with bad behavioral features like evil and filth. Settlers brought this prejudice to North America when they settled across the sea in the 17th century. By the end of the seventeenth century the race became the basis of slavery (people were captured and treated as wealth for free labor). Blacks did not choose to come to the United States, but they were brought to North America through international slave trade. They were forced to enter slavery, they were caught by European slave merchants and shipped to the new world, sugar, rum, and various goods were traded and then shipped to Europe.
What does the word "civilization" mean today? In most modern times, this is a positive word related to the West's one. But for this reason, scholars have adapted it to reflect colonialism, in particular racial discrimination, slavery, genocide. This new perspective may not be perfect on its own. The attitude of Europe to the territory of colonial rule is complicated. Many thinkers celebrated it, but they felt aversion to it and expressed responses to the irony. Irish writer Oliver Goldsmith is one of them.