THE VICTORIAN AGE
The Victorian age took its name from Queen Victoria. The Victorian era was the age of progress, stability and great social reforms but in the same time was characterised by poverty, injustice and social unrest (tensioni sociali).
VICTORIAN VALUES
The Victorians were great moralisers. They  promoted a code of values based on personal duty, hard work, respectability and charity.
    These values were of equal application to all  strata of society, but were given their essential Victorian form by the upper  or middle classes.
    The idea of respectability distinguished the  middle from the lower class. Respectability was a mixture of morality, hypocrisy and conformity to social standards. It  meant (significava):
- The possession of good manners (buone maniere);
 - The ownership (proprietà) of a comfortable house with servants and a carriage (carrozza);
 - Regular attendance at church (presenza regolare in chiesa);
 - Charitable activity (attività caritativa). Philanthropy was a wide phenomenon that absorbed the energies of thousands of Victorians.
 
Bourgeois ideals also dominated Victorian family life:
- The family was a patriarchal unit;
 - The man represented the authority;
 - The women had the key role regarded the education of children and the managing of the house.
 
The category of “fallen women”, adulteresses  (adultere) or unmarried mothers (ragazze madri) or prostitutes, was condemned  and emarginated.
      Sexuality was generally repressed and prudery in its most extreme  manifestations (nella sua estrema manifestazione) led (ha portato) to the  denunciation of nudity in art and the rejection (rifiuto) of words with sexual  connotation from everyday vocabulary (vocabolario quotidiano).
PATRIOTISM
Civil pride (orgoglio civile) and national  fervour (fervore nazionale) were frequent among the British. 
  Patriotism was deeply (profondamente)  influenced by ideas of racial  superiority. The British had the convinction that the races of the world  were divided by physical and intellectual differences, that some were destined  to be led by others (alcuni erano destinati ad essere guidati da altri). 
    The concept of “the white man’s burden” (fardello dell’uomo bianco) was exalted by  the colonial writers (dagli scrittori coloniali), like Kipling,  and the expansion of the empire was regarded  as a mission (era vista come una missione).
EVANGELICALISM
The religious movement known as Evangelism, ispired by Wesley the founder of Methodism, exerted an important influence on Victorian code of values. The Evangelicals indeed (infatti) believed in:
- Obedience to a strict code of morality;
 - Dedication to humanitarian causes and social reform.
 
UTILITARIANISM
The 19th-century social thinking was  influenced also by the philosophical movement of utilitarianism, based on Bentham’s  principles.
    Utilitarianism contributed to the Victorian  conviction that any problem could be overcome (possa essere superato) through reason. The key-words of this  philosophy were: usefulness, happiness  and avoidance of pain (utilità, felicità e di evitare il dolore).
EMPIRICISM
Utilitarian indifference to human and cultural  values was attacked by many intellectuals including Charles Dickens and John Stuart Mill, a major figure of empiricism.
    He thought:
- Legislation could help men develop their natural talents and personalities;
 - Progress came from mental energy and therefore (perciò) he accorded great importance to education and art.
 
He promoted a series of reforms: popular education, trade union organisation, emancipation of women, the development of cooperatives, etc.
DARWINISM
The scientific discovery began to disturb the  belief in a universe stable (la credenza di un universo stabile). There was a  new view of the universe, perceived  as being incessantly changing (in  cambiamento continuo).
    Charles Darwin in his famous work “On the  origin of species” argued that man is the result of a process of evolution and that in the fight for  life only the strongest species survived.  Darwin’s theory  discarded (scardina) the version of creation given by the Bible.
THE AGE OF EXPANSION AND REFORMS
Queen Victoria’s  reign (1837-1901) was the longest in  the history of England.  The Victorian age began with the First  Reform Act (1832), a great social achievement (una grande conquista  sociale).
    It was a period of significant political,  social and technological progress and expansion both economic and territorial.
    The merits of this positive period belonged (veniva)  to the Quenn, who, in marked contrast with the other European monarchs, reigned constitutionally (regnò in  maniera costituzionale). She was a mediator between the two party (Liberals and  Conservatives) and never overruled (annullò) Parliament.
    The Government had to face two major problems  such:
- a strong campaign for liberal trade (commercio libero) that led to the abolition (che condusse all’abrogazione) of the Corn Laws (tassa sull’importazione del grano);
 - the Chartist: a working-class movement who called for social reforms and the extension of the right to vote.
 
THE GREAT EXHIBITION
The great  exhibition of 185, held (tenutasi) in Crystal  Palace in London, celebrated British advances (progressi)  in science, technology and the Empire.
    In the meantime (nel frattempo) workers had  begun to come together (hanno iniziato ad unirsi) in Trade Unions (in  Sindacati). After strong opposition from the Government, the Trade Unions are legalised in 1882 and  in 1906 the Labour Party (Partito  Laburista) was born.
THE URBAN HABITAT
The poor lived in slums (baraccopoli), appalling (orribili) quarters characterised by  squalor, disease (malattia) and crime.
    The conditions of life were very bad: there was  an high death rate (alto tasso di mortalità) and terrible working conditions.  The atmosphere was polluted (inquinata) and that caused a disastrous effect especially on children’s health  (salute dei bambini).
    The Government promoted an campaign against national ill health (cattiva salute) through  (attraverso):
- cleaning up of the towns (ripulitura delle città);
 - foundation of professional organisations to control medical education and research;
 - building of modern hospitals.
 
 A lot of services, such as water, gas,  lighting, parks, stadiums, were introduced. Even new Victorian institutions  like prisons, police stations, boarding schools (convitti), town halls  (municipi).
    Law and order were among the major problems of  the urban environment (ambiente urbano). The Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel  founded the Metropolitan Police, known as “bobbies”  from the name of their founder.
THE BRITISH EMPIRE
The british empire extended his power all over  the world: into Asia (Ceylon,  India), Africa (Egypt, Kenya,  Sudan, Rhodesia), Central America and Oceania.
    Most British citizens were extremely proud of  their empire and regarded colonial expansion as a mission. This attitude came  to be known as “jingoism”  (sciovinismo).
THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
In America the political situation was  tense (era tesa) because of the growing split (crescente frattura) between the  North and the South. While the North was industrialised and the population was  especially white (the immigrants from Europe settled  in the North), the economy of the South was based on the vast plantations of  tobaccos and cotton, and on the slavery (schiavitù). 
    North was abolitionists and gave pressure (fece  pressione) on Southern states to abolish slavery.
    The civil  war lasted (durò) four years (from  1861 to 1865) and ended (si concluse) with the abolition of slavery.
    However (tuttavia) the abolition of slavery did  not  grant (non garantì) the blacks  equality and economic security. The blacks  were free but penniless (poveri), they were discriminated in schools, hospitals  and transport (black code), were frightened (furono terrorizzati) and  persecuted by the racists (Ku Klux Klan).
    During the war many possession sparished (molte  ricchezze svanirono), especially, in the South, but in the North big fortunes  were made and financial empire was created by men who rose from nothing (da  uomini che venivano dal nulla) (es.: Rockefeller) and embodied (incarnò) the American dream (sogno americano): the  myth of the self-made man (il mito  dell’uomo che si è fatto da solo).
    Other important events were: the discovery of  gold in California,  the relevants technological developments   and the railroad (ferrovia) that joined (che unì) Atlantic to the  Pacific. The America  become (diventa) the richest and most modern country in the world.
AMERICAN RENAISSANCE
In New England,  the centre of American cultural life, developed (si sviluppò) the movement  known as the “New England Renaissance”.  This movement represent the beginning (rappresenta l’inizio) of the American  literature.
    Example of writers:  Herman Melville and Walt Whitman. Also Emily  Dickinson was an outstanding figure but isolated (fu una figura di spicco ma  isolata).
    The most influential figure of American  Renaissance was Ralph Waldo Emerson.  His philosophy, called Trascendentalism,  encouraged an optimistic and self-reliant point of view which found expression  (che trovò espressione) particularly in the poems of Walt Whitman.
THE VICTORIAN NOVEL
During the Victorian Age the novels (romanzi) became the most  popular form of literature and the main form of entertainment (la maggior forma  di intrattenimento) because they were read aloud (ad alta voce) within the  family (all’interno della famiglia).
    They were first published in instalments  (pubblicati a puntate) in the pages of periodicals.
    The novelists in their works  described society as they saw it (descrivevano la società come la vedevano). They denounced  the evils of  their society, however their criticism was not  radical.
    A great number of novels were  written by women but some women used  a male pseudonym (usavano uno pseudonimo maschile) because for a woman it  wasn’t easy to publish. The woman’s novel was an realistic exploration of the  daily lives (nella vita quotidiana) and values of women (nei valori femminili) within  the family and the community (all’interno della famiglia e della comunità).
    Also the majority of readers were  women because they had more time than men to spend at home.
  It’s possible to divideVictorian  novels into three groups:
- The Early-Victorian novel. Main writer was Charles Dickens. Themes: social and humanitarian.
 - The Mid- Victorian novel. Main writers: Bronte sisters and Robert Stevenson. Themes: Romantic and Gothic traditions and psychological vein.
 - The Late- Victorian novel. Main writers: Thomas Hardy and Oscar Wilde. Themes: sense of dissatisfaction (insoddisfazione) with values of the age.
 
The most common features:
- There is a narrator that comment and erect a rigid barrier between right and wrong;
 - The setting often was the city, symbol of industrial civilisation and in the same time expression of anonymous lives;
 - The plot was long and complicated;
 - The analysis of the characters’ inner lives (analisi delle vite interiori dei personaggi);
 - In the final chapter the events are explained and justified.
 
