ABSTRACT

Written by a team of eminent historians, these essays explore how ten twentieth-century intellectuals and social reformers sought to adapt such familiar Victorian values as `civilisation', `domesticity', `conscience' and `improvement' to modern conditions of democracy, feminism and mass culture. Covering such figures as J.M. Keynes, E.M. Forster and Lord Reith of the BBC, these interdisciplinary studies scrutinize the children of the Victorians at a time when their private assumptions and public positions were under increasing strain in a rapidly changing world.
After the Victorians is written in honour of the late Professor John Clive of Harvard, and uses, as he did, the method of biography to connnect the public and private lives of the generations who came after the Victorians.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

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chapter 1|26 pages

Henrietta Barnett 1851–1936

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chapter 2|24 pages

George Alfred Lefroy 1854–1919

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chapter 3|26 pages

Raymond Unwin 1863–1940

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chapter 4|22 pages

Eleanor Rathbone 1872–1946

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chapter |22 pages

5E.M.Forster 1879–1970

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chapter 6|22 pages

Leonard Woolf 1880–1969

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chapter |18 pages

7J.M.Keynes 1883–1946

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chapter 8|20 pages

John Reith 1889–1971

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chapter |20 pages

9J.B.Priestley 1894–1984

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chapter 10|18 pages

John Summerson 1904–1992

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chapter 11|14 pages

John Clive 1924–1990

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