ABSTRACT

Victorian Values is an absorbing portrait of Victorian society and culture, presenting different aspects of the age through profiles of representative or pioneering figures - among them Dickens, Pugin, Mary Kingsley, Lord Leighton, Gladstone and Joseph Chamberlain. It illuminates Victorian attitudes to a range of issues from education, health and self-help to civic ideals and sexual identity. Widely used and enjoyed by students, teachers and general readers alike, it has now been extended with four new essays and the Introduction, comparing the Victorian age with our own, has been updated and rewritten.




chapter 1|17 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|15 pages

‘Kindness and Reason'

William Lovett and Education

chapter 3|12 pages

‘Cultivated Capital'

Patronage and Art in Nineteenth-Century Manchester and Leeds

chapter 4|16 pages

Dickens and his Readers

chapter 5|13 pages

Pugin and the Medieval Dream

chapter 6|11 pages

New Men?

The Bourgeois Cult of Home

chapter 7|12 pages

Titus Salt

Enlightened Entrepreneur

chapter 8|13 pages

Samuel Smiles

The Gospel of Self-Help

chapter 9|12 pages

Building Bridges

George Godwin and Architectural Journalism

chapter 10|11 pages

Gladstonian Finance

chapter 11|12 pages

Ministering Angels

Victorian Ladies and Nursing Reform

chapter 12|14 pages

Josephine Butler

Feminism's Neglected Pioneer

chapter 16|13 pages

William Morris

Art and Idealism

chapter 17|15 pages

Mary Kingsley and West Africa

chapter 18|11 pages

Attic Attitudes

Leighton and Aesthetic Philosophy

chapter 19|12 pages

‘Commanding the Heart'

Edward Carpenter and Friends

chapter 20|15 pages

The Quest for Englishness

chapter 21|11 pages

Diamonds are Forever?

Kipling's Imperialism