About This Book
The author offers a personal, non-authoritative survey of Victorian literature that interprets its dominant compromise between commercial utilitarianism and various intellectual and artistic reactions. He traces how novelists and poets responded—sometimes in popular, emotive modes that rallied common feeling, sometimes in learned or satirical protest—examining figures who embodied or opposed the era's moral and aesthetic tensions. Through close critical readings and polemical reflection he highlights recurring themes such as social reform, religious sensibility, and aesthetic dissent, and concludes by describing how the prevailing compromise gradually fragmented. The book combines broad thematic argument with chapters devoted to major novelists, major poets, and the later cultural breakdown.
About the Author
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