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Obidience in Children's Literature During the Victorian Era

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Obidience in Children's Literature During the Victorian Era
Obedience in Children’s Literature during the Victorian Age

Table of Contents 1. Introduction 3 2. Teaching Obedience through Text - Historical Development 3 3. The Victorian Age - a time of change 6 3.1 Broad themes of change 6 3.2 changes in society 6 3.3 Interim Conclusion 7 4. Obedience in Children’s Fiction - Tradition and Change 7 4.1 Kingsley’s The Water Babies 8 4.2 Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass and what Alice found there 10 5 Conclusion 14 5. Bibliography 15

1. Introduction

Lewis Carroll’s stories about Alice and her adventures in Wonderland and in the Looking-Glass-World are children’s stories almost everyone nowadays knows from Walt Disney. During my studies I had the chance to get a closer look at the literary works of Carroll; on the one hand in a seminar on children’s literature of the Victorian era and on the other hand during a theater performance, where the literary piece provided the basis for the play. When encountering the works of Carroll in such ways, one notices the frequency of nonsensical rules Alice has to obey in order to get along in the fictitious world. Due to the rules the main character of the story – a child – does not understand but obeys anyway the question emerged what role obedience played in children’s literature during this period. Since the Victorian era was a time of change the main approach of this paper is a cultural one with a focus on how education changed from Puritan times to Victorian. The stories mainly focused on in the course of this paper are Charles Kingsley’s The Water Babies and Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. Concerning these literary works, a close reading in matters of obedience and consequences of being disobedient, expresses in what way children were educated during these times.
The paper is structured as follows: first of all, a brief overview of the historical development



Bibliography: Auerbach, Nina; Knoepfelmacher, U.C. (eds) Forbidden Journeys. Fairy Tales and Fantasies by Victorian Women Writers. University of Chicago Press. 1992 Banerjee, Jaqueline Brown, Mary E. “A Brief History of Children 's Literature”. New Haven: Southern Connecticut State University, Web. June 23rd, 2012. retrieved from <<http://www.southernct.edu/~brownm/300hlit.html>> Darton, Harvey F.J. Children’s Books in England. Five Centuries of Social Life³. Cambridge: University Press. 1982 Daunton, Martin Evans, Eric. "Laissez-faire and the Victorians." BBC, 2004. Web. July 02nd, 2012. Retrieved from <http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/trail/victorian_britain/education_health/laissez_faire_07.shtml>. Kingsley, Charles. The Water-Babies. A Fairy Tale for a Land-Baby. London: Penguin. 2008 MacLeod, Christine Nead, Lynda. "Women and Urban Life in Victorian Britain." BBC, 2004. Web. June 30th, 2012. retrieved from <http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/trail/victorian_britain/women_out/urban_life_01.shtml>. Pinker, Steven. “The Blank Slate. The Modern Denial of Human Nature”.2002. Web. June 06th, 2012 retrieved from <<http://polatulet.narod.ru/dvc/spbs/pinker_blankslate.html (06/10/12)> Rose, Lionel. The Erosion of Childhood: Child Oppression in England, 1860-1918. London: Routledge.1991 Ruskin, John Susina, Christopher Jan. Victorian Kunstmärchen: A Study in Children’s Literature, 1840-1875. Indiana University. 1986

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