Victorian$90283$ - translation to spanish
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Victorian$90283$ - translation to spanish

LITERATURE DURING THE PERIOD OF QUEEN VICTORIA'S REIGN
Victorian fiction; Victorian author; Victorian novel; Victorian poetry; Victorian prose
  • [[Lord Tennyson]], the [[Poet Laureate]]
  • [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]] wrote Victorian fiction outside Victoria's domains.
  • [[Charles Darwin]]'s work ''[[On the Origin of Species]]'' affected society, throughout the Victoria era, and still does today.
  • The [[Brontë]] sisters wrote fiction rather different from that common at the time.

Victorian      
adj. victoriano
Victorian England         
  • Photograph of a mother and baby by [[Alfred Capel-Cure]] (circa 1850s or 60s)
  • This illustration of a child ''drawer'' (a type of [[hurrier]]) pulling a coal tub was originally published in the Children's Employment Commission (Mines) 1842 report.
  • Rorke's Drift]] during the [[Anglo-Zulu War]] of 1879
  • 220x220px
  • Cheap meals for poor children in [[East London]] (1870)
  • ''If we lift our skirts they level their eye-glasses at our ankles'' (1854), cartoon suggesting that men saw women lifting their dresses as a titillating opportunity to see some of their body shape.
  • left
  • left
  • Slum area in [[Glasgow]] (1871)
  • left
  • Crew stood with a railway engine (1873)
PERIOD OF BRITISH HISTORY ENCOMPASSING QUEEN VICTORIA'S REIGN (1837-1901)
Victorian Era; Victorian period; Victorian Age; Victorian age; Victorian era (Great Britain); Victorian times; Victorian England; Victorian-era; Victorian periode; Victorian Period; Victorian Britain; The Victorian Era; Victoria era; Victorian culture; Victorian history; Victorian (era); Reign of Victoria; United Kingdom under Victoria; United Kingdom under Queen Victoria; UK under Queen Victoria; UK under Victoria; Britain under Victoria; Britain under Queen Victoria; Great Britain under Victoria; Great Britain under Queen Victoria; Victoria's Britain; Reign of Queen Victoria; Victoria's England; Victorian society
(n.) = Inglaterra victoriana, Inglaterra de la época victoriana
Ex: The writer examines the employment of women in the gas stove industry in late Victorian England.
Victorian         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Victorians; Victorian style; Victorian (disambiguation); Victorianus; Victorian-style; Victorianism; Victorianus (disambiguation)
victoriano

Definition

Victorian
(Victorians)
1.
Victorian means belonging to, connected with, or typical of Britain in the middle and last parts of the 19th century, when Victoria was Queen.
We have a lovely old Victorian house.
...The Early Victorian Period.
ADJ: usu ADJ n
2.
You can use Victorian to describe people who have old-fashioned attitudes, especially about good behaviour and morals.
Victorian values are much misunderstood...
My grandfather was very Victorian.
ADJ
3.
The Victorians were the British people who lived in the time of Queen Victoria.
N-COUNT: usu pl

Wikipedia

Victorian literature

Victorian literature refers to English literature during the reign of Queen Victoria (1837–1901). The 19th century is considered by some to be the Golden Age of English Literature, especially for British novels. It was in the Victorian era that the novel became the leading literary genre in English. English writing from this era reflects the major transformations in most aspects of English life, from scientific, economic, and technological advances to changes in class structures and the role of religion in society. Famous novelists from this period include Charles Dickens, William Makepeace Thackeray, the three Brontë sisters, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy and Rudyard Kipling.

While the Romantic period was a time of abstract expression and inward focus, essayists, poets, and novelists during the Victorian era began to direct their attention toward social issues. Writers such as Thomas Carlyle called attention to the dehumanizing effects of the Industrial Revolution and what Carlyle called the "Mechanical Age". This awareness inspired the subject matter of other authors, like poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning and novelists Charles Dickens and Thomas Hardy. Barrett's works on child labor cemented her success in a male-dominated world where women writers often had to use masculine pseudonyms. Dickens employed humor and an approachable tone while addressing social problems such as wealth disparity. Hardy used his novels to question religion and social structures.

Poetry and theatre were also present during the Victorian era. Robert Browning and Alfred Tennyson were Victorian England's most famous poets. With regard to the theatre it was not until the last decades of the 19th century that any significant works were produced. Notable playwrights of the time include Gilbert and Sullivan, George Bernard Shaw, and Oscar Wilde.