The Victorians
by Jeremy Paxman
BBC Books (2009)
In "The Victorians", Jeremy Paxman offers his personal take on the most important and influential period of our national past. Using the paintings of the era as his starting point - in his view, the one mode of Victorian art yet to be rescued from indifference - Paxman explores themes of family, urban life, industry, empire, and imagination to uncover truths (and explode some myths) about Victorian Britain. To Paxman, these paintings were the television of their day, immensely popular visual narratives that attracted crowds by the hundreds of thousands: a single picture show featuring Elizabeth Butler's Balaclava (depicting survivors of the Charge of the Light Brigade) drew 50,000 viewers, some of them openly weeping. The Victorians shows how artists like Butler, William Powell Frith, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Luke Fildes, and Ford Madox Brown were chronicling a world changing before their eyes, and his overview ranges across the whole of Victorian life and culture: from high gothic architecture to the birth of the football league, from the novels of Dickens to the technological marvels of Brunel. Published to coincide with a landmark BBC series, "The Victorians" is an opinionated, informed, surprising, and hugely enthusiastic appraisal of the birth of modern Britain - a glorious reminder of how the Victorians made us who we are today.
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2 comments:
For years and years, I was most interested in the 17th century: the English civil wars, Puritan Commonwealth, later Stuarts and the Glorious Revolution, Heroic Netherlands, Swedish adventurism, splendid Spanish art and architecture etc etc.
Now I have decided that students are far more interested in the Victorian-Edwardian era and, in any case, this era is far easier for me to research. If Paxman covers the International Exhibitions, Pre-Raphaelites, Arts and Crafts, impact of trains and ships, India, Gothic revivalism and my other favourite topics, I shall have to take him away with my on my Easter holiday.
thanks :)
It is good in its general sweep and the illustrations are wonderful for someone like me, but there are better texts depending how deep you want to go. For a general introduction I prefer the book by A N Wilson.
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