The Victorian Eighteenth Century
An Intellectual History
Young, B.W.,
University Lecturer and Student and Tutor in History, Christ Church College, Oxford
Print publication date: 2007
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2008 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-925622-8 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199256228.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
The Victorians were preoccupied by the 18th century. It was central to many 19th-century debates, particularly those concerning the place of history and religion in national life. This book explores the diverse responses of key Victorian writers and thinkers — Thomas Carlyle, John Henry Newman, Leslie Stephen, Vernon Lee, and M. R. James — to a period which commanded their interest throughout the Victorian era, from the accession of Queen Victoria to the opening decades of the 20th century. They were, on the one hand, appalled by the apparent frivolity of the 18th century, which was denounced by Carlyle as a dispiriting successor to the culture of Puritan England, and, on the other they were concerned to continue its secularizing influence on English culture, as is seen in the pioneering work of Leslie Stephen, who was passionately keen to transform the legacy of 18th-century scepticism into Victorian agnosticism. The Victorian interest in the 18th century was never a purely insular matter, and the history of 18th-century France, Germany, and Italy played a dominant role in the 19th-century historical understanding. A debate between generations was enacted, in which Romanticism melded into Victorianism. The Victorians were haunted by the 18th century, both metaphorically and literally, and the book closes with consideration of the culturally resonant 18th-century ghosts encountered in the fiction of Vernon Lee and M. R. James.
Keywords: Thomas Carlyle, John Henry Newman, Leslie Stephen, Vernon Lee, M.R. James, Puritans, Romanticism, Victorianism, English culture, Victorian culture Table of Contents
Introduction
1.
Carlyle and the ‘Distracted Century’
2.
Carlyle,
Friedrich, and the ‘Bastard Heroic’
3.
Gibbon, Newman, and the Religious Accuracy of the Historian
4.
The Stephen Family and the Eighteenth Century
5.
Hanoverian Hauntings
Index
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