Victorian literature "This is the best time, this is the worst era, it is spring of hope, it is the winter of despair" (Dickens, Pag). Charles Dickens, one of the most famous writers of the Victorian era, is intended to show the relationship between the French Revolution and Dickens's own era, the decline of the Victorian era ("About" n. peg.) Dickens wanted to show that the trend of his time has already been done and traced the tragedy that could not be completed in France.
The Victorian era of ENGL 525 literature is exploring Victorian literature, focusing on the Victorian literature and the broader context of society. Works studied include Charles Dickens, Charlotte and Emily Bronte, George Elliott, Thomas Hardy, Antonio Trollp, Elizabeth Gaskell, Alfred Tennison, Robert Brown Ning, Oscar Wilde and others. 3 Credits ENGL 526 Modernism In this course, we explore various "problems" of modernism regardless of whether these trends are past or present, related to modern knowledge and aesthetic emotions. Expressionism, Futurism, Dadaism, Surrealism
The so-called yellow 1990s literature representative Oscar Wilde stood at the end of the 19th century and laughed at the Victorian era. He ridiculed its value in the value of the Victorian era, especially "serious importance" which may be his most popular work. When playing the text in the drama, the drama also bore the serious thought which is the most important virtue of the Victorian people. Living life hard, honest, frank, honest, sincere is an ideal of the Victorian era. Wild not only satirises hypocritical and hypocritical virtues, but makes his real existence laugh.
Victorian era: (also known as the Victorian and Victorian era) broadly refers to everything with the typical characteristics of Queen Victoria of England (1837 - 1901) and the times . For example, unique narrowness, bourgeoisist materialism, belief in social progress, and the quality of pride and morality are often considered Victorian. This stereotype is dramatic with a critical attitude of serious Victorian writers such as Charles Darwin, Carl Marx, Sigmund Freud (a strong controversy in England), and Charles Dickens and George Eliot. The development of intelligence is contradictory. In literature, the Victorian era is a great era of British novels, the latter is the rise of decline and symbolism.