Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Victorian Literature - Coggle Diagram
Victorian Literature
The novel
best represents
ethical
religious
social
themes
problems
industrialisation
philanthropy
typical - Victorian novel
omniscient narrator
plot
long
complicated
novel - invalid instrument
human condition - modern world
groups
early Victorian
Dickens
mid-Victorians
Bronte sisters
late Victorians
Oscar Wilde
The early and mid- Victorians
Charles Dickens
novels - realism
social problems - time
problems
poverty
bad housing
inadequate education
stromng moralist
the Bronte sister
Charlotte and Emily
novels
gothic tradition
individual
feelings
emotion
Charlotte
Jane Eyere
poor orphan
Emily
Wuthering Heights
greatest novels
The late Victorians
Robert Stevenson
adventure novels
Treasure island
memorable novels
mysterious
Victorian period
symbolic story - Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Aesthecism
19th century - England
Aesthetic Movement
start: 1870
Oscar Wilde
brilliance
eccentricity
personalities - fashionable salons
London
Paris
tragically - life
alone
poverty
imprisoned
homosesuality
no literary movement - new form od epression
art for art's sake
Victorian poetry
Victorian period
group of poets
poets
Tennyson
Browning
Rossetti
Rossetti's sister
Browing
Victorian theatre
great playwrights
dramatists - end of century
Oscar Wilde
George Shaw