Baker, Ernest Albert. The History of the
English Novel. Vol. VIII (New York: Barnes and Noble; first published
1937): 161-176.
Baker provides a brief overview of Kingsley's novels, discussing their major
themes and the context of the times in which they were written, especially
the period of the Crimean War.
Novels ;
Social
and Political Novel ; Crimean War
.
Baker, William J. “Charles Kingsley on the
Crimean War: A Study In Chauvinism.” Southern Humanities Review
Vol. IV, No. 3 (Summer 1970): 247-256.
Baker notes that the Crimean War was occurring while Kingsley was writing
Westward Ho!, a war to which he refers over and over in this
novel. Numerous aspects of this later war were similar, he believed, in many
respects to the earlier war with Spain. The chauvinism he consistently
displayed during the Crimean War fostered as well as reflected the chauvinism
of his contemporaries. Moreover, Kingsley, who never fought in a war,
had a romantic “boy-like fantasy” view of war (254). While in many
ways, declares Baker, he was liberal, compassionate, a free-thinking cleric,
a supporter of the poor, an advocate for social reform, a critic of the discriminatory
class system, “his liberal sensitivity stopped at the northern edge of the
English Channel”. He combined in a contradictory stance “an insightful
concern for his country's social problems alongside an uncritical bellicosity
toward national foes” (255).
Westward
Ho! ; Crimean
War ; War
; Chauvinism
;
Social and Political Views .
Swenson, Kristine. Medical Women and Victorian Fiction.
Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2005.
In this work Swenson examines the complex cultural intersections between
women and medicine in Victorian fiction and wider society. She considers the
roles of Grace Harvey and Valencia St. Just, two Eng-ish Crimean War nurses,
in the novel Two Years Ago. Kingsley stresses that the nurse’s role
is as much moral as medical. Moreover, despite the wartime bravery displayed
by his nurses, Kingsley insists that they must ultimately bend to the conventionality
of the Victorian marriage. Though Grace was a medical and religious heroine
she must be redefined domestically as wife, the proper role of a Victorian
woman. Swenson also highlights Kingsley’s forceful social criticism in Two
Years Ago where he lays the blame for pervasive disease and unsanitary
problems across all classes.
Two Years Ago; Sanitation;
Nurses;
Crimean War.
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