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Queen Victoria: Gender and Empire

di Susan Kingsley Kent

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Part of The World in A Life series, this brief, inexpensive text provides insight into the life of Queen Victoria. As one of the longest reigning monarchs in British history, Queen Victoria gave her name to an age filled with enormous possibilities and perplexing contradictions. At the time ofVictoria's birth, Britain ruled over what was fast becoming the greatest empire in the world, containing millions of non-white, non-Christian peoples. During her childhood and youth, the kingdom itself became transformed from one dominated by landed aristocrats to one governed according to theprinciples of bourgeois liberalism. The royal family served as the most visible symbol of domesticity, while at the same time Victoria's very position as queen defied the ideology of separate spheres upon which domesticity rested. Victoria, the ruler of millions of people, opposed womenparticipating in politics or public life. She believed women's suffrage to be a "wicked folly" and a violation of God's laws. She never gave up that belief, even as the fledging feminist movement of mid-century matured and grew to the size of a mass movement by the end of the century. And yet shereigned, with little thought of the contradictions that entailed.We live in a global age where big concepts like "globalization" often tempt us to forget the personal side of the past. The titles in The World in A Life series aim to revive these meaningful lives. Each one shows us what it was like to live on a world historical stage. Brief, inexpensive, andthematic, each book can be read in a week, fit within a wide range of curricula, and shed insight into a particular place or time. Four to six short primary sources at the end of each volume sharpen the reader's view of an individual's impact on world history.… (altro)
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An odd book, perhaps suggested by it's series title, "The World in A Life;" It's difficult to write a biography and a history of 60 yrs of the British Empire in less than 200 pages. That dual purpose creates an odd whiplash effect: one chapter goes into some depth about Victoria's life, while in the next Victoria is an abstraction and we get microhistories of Ireland, India, South Africa, the fight for women's rights. The microhistories are excellent and may very well include things you haven't read before, such as Charles Dickens' racist, imperialist, pro-slavery writings.

Kent's own tone is a little troubling. Starving Irish peasants refused to pay rent because, she says, they were "bitter" (137). She seems similarly impatient with African, Caribbean, and Indian colonized peoples, as if, yes, she knows what she's supposed to write, but really, those rebels were all so messy. So on any three pages the book is excellent, engaging, absorbing, then you read something that makes you want to throw it in the bin. That, combined with the fact that it is an in-depth biography, then it's a history of everything, then it's a brief biography, then it's back to a history, then it's a wholly political biography of Victoria, losing sight completely of the personal biography with which the book began, makes it, as I said, an odd book -- but a keeper. ( )
  susanbooks | Jul 27, 2021 |
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Part of The World in A Life series, this brief, inexpensive text provides insight into the life of Queen Victoria. As one of the longest reigning monarchs in British history, Queen Victoria gave her name to an age filled with enormous possibilities and perplexing contradictions. At the time ofVictoria's birth, Britain ruled over what was fast becoming the greatest empire in the world, containing millions of non-white, non-Christian peoples. During her childhood and youth, the kingdom itself became transformed from one dominated by landed aristocrats to one governed according to theprinciples of bourgeois liberalism. The royal family served as the most visible symbol of domesticity, while at the same time Victoria's very position as queen defied the ideology of separate spheres upon which domesticity rested. Victoria, the ruler of millions of people, opposed womenparticipating in politics or public life. She believed women's suffrage to be a "wicked folly" and a violation of God's laws. She never gave up that belief, even as the fledging feminist movement of mid-century matured and grew to the size of a mass movement by the end of the century. And yet shereigned, with little thought of the contradictions that entailed.We live in a global age where big concepts like "globalization" often tempt us to forget the personal side of the past. The titles in The World in A Life series aim to revive these meaningful lives. Each one shows us what it was like to live on a world historical stage. Brief, inexpensive, andthematic, each book can be read in a week, fit within a wide range of curricula, and shed insight into a particular place or time. Four to six short primary sources at the end of each volume sharpen the reader's view of an individual's impact on world history.

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