Victorian Children's Literature
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Recent papers in Victorian Children's Literature
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is a remarkable text which has endured as one of the world's most popular children's classics - but is it really a children's book? Or perhaps much more than that? In an exploration of how the genre of... more
Henry Holiday to Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark" (1876, final chapter The Vanishing) and "The Image Breakers" (1566?) by Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder. In my viaw, both images are related to violence: Destruction of heretics and... more
In discussions surrounding subalternity, theorists have predominantly focussed upon the notion of difference based upon binary models of gender, race, colonialism or a North/South divide. However, until recently, little attention has been... more
In twenty-first-century popular psychology and self-help literature, the “inner child” refers to an original or true self that serves as a repository of wisdom and creativity for its adult counterpart. This essay traces the modern inner... more
Planning is a way of projecting our intentions, that is, a method of deciding what we want to accomplish or to plan, means to project, forecast, design or make or chart our a course. From these views, it can be summarized that planning... more
In the real world, Alice’s life only involved around being “punished” even though half the times she was only “anxious to be of use.” She is gleeful when realization dawns on her that in the Looking-Glass world that “there’ll be no one... more
In recent years, many of George MacDonald’s narrative, poetic, critical and theological works have been made available in digital formats — which has opened up new possibilities for investigating these works. The aim of the present paper... more
This is about a comment by Charles Dickens on J. E. Millais' painting "Christ in the House of His Parents". (2015-01-08: Correction of mistakes. 2015-01-12: Small image of Edward VI added.)
Children’s literature was not recognized as a genre until the 18th century, and only in the late 19th century, did it start to respond to its audience’s interests. With the acknowledgment of the audience’s interest, the genre has reached... more
It's nonsense, but within that, Lewis Carroll's logic in this example strictly follows the logic of Edward Lear's nonsense. This is about the "Banker's" face after his encounter with the Bandersnatch in the chapter "The Banker's Fate" in... more
On the Jubjub bird and on Charles Darwin and evolution being possibly addressed in Lewis Carroll's and Henry Holiday's "The Hunting of the Snark". --- 1st: 2015-01-01, update (minor changes): 2015-01-02 19:07 UTC. --- Errata (corrected on... more
The theme of religious belief occurs with increasing frequency and depth across Antonia Forest’s books and is central to the development of several main characters, including Nicola, Ann and Patrick. In this article, I focus particularly... more
George MacDonald’s "The Light Princess" details representation of the female coming-of-age body, mature body, and aging, menopausal body to reveal how his modern fairy tale both utilizes and exposes long-standing social codes imposed on... more
This article attempts a novel reading of Christina Rossetti's little known children's narrative, Speaking Likenesses (1874), through an examination of the socio-historical background, and specifically the Victorian debates on prostitution... more
This is my assumption: In Lewis Carroll's and Henry Holiday's "The Hunting of the Snark", the "Baker" is an allusion to (among others) Thomas Cranmer. And his forgotten forty-two boxes are an allusion to Thomas Cranmers Forty-Two... more
In my book L’esthétique du jeu dans les Alice de Lewis Carroll (The Aesthetics of Play in Lewis Carroll’s Alice books), I have argued that Carroll’s own adaptation of Wonderland for children “aged from nought to five,” that is to say The... more
The late Victorian period marked a turning point in the history of Dante’s reception in Anglo-American culture, with the macroscopic growth in the production of creative, critical and scholarly responses to Dante’s life and works. Far... more
The works of Charles Dickens (1812-1870) are remarkable for his meticulous attention to the polyphony of surrounding society. Thanks to his personal experience, his novels also reveal an intense concern about the vulnerability of... more
This study traces the evolution of holistic education in Britain from the early nineteenth century to the schools of the new millennium. What Edward Thring, the mid-Victorian headmaster of Uppingham School, termed 'true manliness' is the... more
Der Struwwelpeter, which has been variously translated as Slovenly Peter, Shock-headed Peter, and Tousle-Headed Peter, is a collection of eleven children’s poems written by Dr. Heinrich Hoffman in 1844. In its assorted translations,... more
Comparison between a photo by Benjamin Duchenne (related to experiments used by Charles Darwin) and a detail from an illustration by Henry Holiday to Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark" ( Comparación entre una foto de Benjamin... more
A court trial sceene by Henry Holiday in an illustration to Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark". Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (aka Lewis Carroll) did not want Henry Holiday to depict the Snark in the illustrations. But Dodgson accepted... more
Something you may or may not deny: Henry Holiday (as much as Lewis Cerroll) was a master of The Art of Deniability, when he illustrated Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark". Ambiguity helped him to stay out of trouble.... more
Presented at the North American Victorian Studies supernumerary conference at Florence, Italy, May 2017.
2015-10-02: You find today's update here as well: http://www.snrk.de/academia/Banker_and_Broker.pdf 2015-04-05: Lay-out changes only. 2014-12-24: Henry Holiday's depiction of the "Broker" in Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark"... more
Both Anglican factions labored to win the support of the next generation, but zealous Protestants approached this task with great urgency. They feared that duplicitous Anglo-Catholics were “Romanizing” their children through the Church... more
See full article here: https://rdcu.be/byEoh. This article argues that food acts and eating in the nineteenth century children’s novel The Coral Island (1858) reveal adult socializing intentions in the context of an expanding British... more
Paper given at the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing's 2016 conference. Partial abstract: By examining a body of prefaces written by women as introductions to the world of science and scientific theory, the... more
This essay reads Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) alongside influential mid-century Victorian psychology studies—paying special attention to those that Carroll owned—in order to trace the divergence of Carroll’s literary... more
The animation is visible - in http://www.snrk.de (small) - in http://www.snrk.de/Noseflip2048.gif (large) - and in the downloaded file https://www.academia.edu/attachments/36499929/download_file?st=MTczNDI5Mzk4OCwxOC4yMjUuOTIuMjU1& only (not in the preview). It shows... more
The "Billiard-marker" in Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark"
Archive: http://www.snrk.de/SnarkHunt_PDFs.7z (247 MiB) is a collection for off-line reading of my assumptions (PDF articles) on Henry Holiday's allusions in Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark". The 7z archive contains the PDFs... more
[left]: Gustave Doré: Plate I of the illustrations to chapter 1 in Miguel de Cervantes' "Don Quixote" (1863 edition). [right]: Gustave Doré: Illustration to John Milton's "Paradise Lost", Book VI, 1866. [center]: Henry Holiday (engraver:... more
Matthias Grünewald: Visit of Saint Anthony to Saint Paul, retinex filtered, vectorized and color desaturated detail from Isenheim altarpiece (1512–1516). --- Lower image: Henry Holiday: from the illustration to the chapter The Beaver's... more
This article links Victorian theories about emotions with recent cognitive studies to explore relations between emotions and nonsense literature. Lewis Carroll’s representation of emotions in the Alice books juxtaposes different styles... more
BDBB Englische Literatur Großbritannien Personale Informationsmittel Lewis Carroll Alice im Wunderland 21-2 Die Erfindung von Alice im Wunderland : wie alles begann / Peter Hunt. Aus dem Englischen von Gisella M.... more
(Encyclopedia article.) One of the most popular children’s books of the Victorian era (1837-1901) and the first quarter of the twentieth century, Charles Kingsley’s The Water-Babies: A Fairy-Tale for a Land-Baby also captured the adult... more
One of the rarest books by Nellie Cornwall, and the very shortest. Fewer than thirty pages. This text is out of copyright in all jurisdictions!
In Henry Holiday's illustrations to Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark" you can find a Bellman, a Baker, a Barrister, a Billiard-marker, a Banker, a maker of Bonnets and Hoods, a Broker, a Butcher and a Beaver. Carroll also... more