Archer, Richard Lawrence. Secondary Education
in the Nineteenth Century (London: Cass, 1966).
Archer discusses the educational thought and practice of Kingsley and their
subsequent influence on British education. He stresses the connection
for Kingsley between religion and education; both served the same end.
Moreover, science in the curriculum was essential and was in no respect against
the teaching of religion. His ideal of mens sana in corpore sano
went hand in hand with his espousal of muscular Christianity. He detested
“the identification of bodily feebleness with spiritual strength” (200).
Archer also examines Kingsley’s important role in the sanitary movement and
his work in having hygienic instruction in schools.
Education
; Muscular
Christianity ; Sanitation
; Science
.
Barnard, H. C. A History of English
Education From 1760. 2nd ed. (First published 1947) (London:
University of London Press, 1961).
Barnard provides a very brief overview of Kingsley the educationist.
He declares that Kingsley was a strong advocate of science in the school curriculum
and held that it complemented the study of religion. Moreover, he was
a firm believer that a knowledge of science was essential for progress in
the hygienic and sanitary reform movement.
Education
; Sanitation
.
Christensen, Allan Conrad. Nineteenth-Century Narratives
of Contagion: Our Feverish Contact. London: Routledge, 2005.
This book is an examination of “how the contagion of the historical moment
infiltrates human relationships in such activities as military struggles,
clothes-making and dressing, medical practice, love affairs, financial transactions
and the use of language. . . . Drawing on recent literary theorists, Christensen
suggests the permeability of the boundaries between [the examined] texts,
which merge into a single narrative or grand récit of history
at work” (frontispiece). Christensen makes extensive reference to Kingsley’s
novel Two Years Ago throughout the work and there are also a number
of allusions to Alton Locke.
Sanitation;
Two Years
Ago; Health.
Cunningham, Valentine. "Soiled Fairy: The
Water-Babie s in its Time," Essays in Criticism Vol. XXXV, No.
2 (April 1985): 121-48.
Cunningham analyzes many of the causes and issues Kingsley treats with heat
and hysteria in The Water-Babies declaring that they frequently coincide
with the age’s heatedness and hysterias for these causes and issues.
Cunningham also discusses The Water-Babies’ various affinities to other
classic fairy-story motifs.
The Water-Babies
; Social
and Political Views ; Fairy-Story
Motifs ; Sanitation
; Cheap
Clothes and Nasty ; Glaucus ;
Religion
.
Dobrzycka, Irena. The Conditions of Living
of the Working Class in the Social Novels of Charles Kingsley (Poznan:
Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1955).
In her treatment of Kingsley’s social and political views, especially as
presented in such novels as Yeast and Two Years Ago , Dobrzycka
focuses on what she perceives as Kingsley’s reactionary bourgeois ideology.
Still, despite his feudalistic views, Dobrzycka praises the realistic portrayal
by this “bard of imperialism”of the living conditions of the proletariat
in these novels. She also lauds his vehement criticism of agrarian misery
and his advocacy of sanitary reform.
Social
and Political Views ; Working-Class
life, Depiction of ; Yeast ;
Two Years
Ago ; Sanitation
.
Fasick, Laura. "Charles Kingsley's Scientific
Treatment of Gender," in Hall, Donald E. (ed.). Muscular Christianity:
Embodying the Victorian Age (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press,
1994): 91-113.
Laura Fasick examines Kingsley's representations of women against the background
of the age's scientific theories, considering that his depiction of disease,
unsanitary conditions, and bodily ill-treatment in his novels represents
an attempt to define strict gender distinctions. She argues that "The
'factual' basis on which Kingsley founded his concern for the maintenance
of distinct gender roles was not only scientific, but specifically hygienic.
. . . Kingsley is as obsessed with sexuality, for him sanctified by monogamous
marriage, as with hygiene, and these interests effectively merge into one"
(91).
Females ;
Sexuality
; Sanitation
; Science
.
Findlay, Isobel M. "Charles Kingsley,"
in Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 190: British Reform
Writers, 1832-1914. Edited by Gary Kelly and Edd Applegate (Detroit:
Gale, 1998): 145-159.
Findlay provides a bibliography of Kingsley’s own works, a short list of
further secondary readings, an account of his life and writings with particular
emphasis on his social and political views as expressed in his reformist
works. “The personal success that Charles Kingsley enjoyed within the
Church and other established social institutions throughout his life did
not prevent him from making important contributions to the cause of reform
in England. Although he has been often dismissed as a mere popularizer
of the thinking of others, especially of Maurice, Kingsley achieved much
though his parochial duties and his activities involving political organization,
print culture, and education. If he did not resolve contradictions
at the heart of reform or reconstruct hierarchic notions of the healthy and
unified social body, the power and particularity of his writing and public
oratory nevertheless generated significant social change” (157).
Overview
; Social
and Political Views ; Sanitation
; Racial
Prejudices .
Rapple, Brendan A. “The Educational Thought
of Charles Kingsley (1819-75),” Historical Studies in Education Vol.
9, No. 1 (Spring 1997): 46-64.
Rapple writes that though Kingsley’s educational works were not as considerable
as those of such contemporaries as Kay-Shuttleworth, Matthew Arnold, Spencer,
or Huxley, they were still significant. However, they have generally
received scant scholarly attention, with the exception of his muscular Christianity
activities. Contending that Kingsley the educationist requires a more
complete treatment, Rapple, “as a vanguard to the needed account,” examines
Kingsley’s “attitude to the young, his staunch belief that the State should
be deeply implicated in the provision of education, the relation between
Kingsley's 'Muscular Christianity' and his views on education, his fervent
conviction that science should figure more noticeably in the curriculum,
his belief that hygiene and sanitary knowledge should be universally taught,
and his advocacy of female education at all levels” (47).
Education
; Children
; Christian
Socialism ; Muscular
Christianity ; Science ;
Sanitation
; Females .
Rapple, Brendan. “The Motif of Water in
Charles Kingsley's The Water-Babies,” University of Mississippi
Studies in English Vol. XI-XII (1993-1995): 259-71.
Kingsley uses the motif of water in The Water-Babies to preach the
virtues of bathing and washing. Cleaning the body and the inculcation
of good sanitary habits is also an effective method of preventing disease.
In addition, washing with water, preferably cold water, helps the attainment
of moral rectitude. “However, the depiction of water as a cleansing
agent may also be viewed in an allegorical sense, namely as purifying morally
and spiritually both the individual Tom as well as the collective society.
Only after Tom's baptismal washing and consequent Christian rebirth does his
deeply felt wish ‘I must be clean, I must be clean’ begin to be truly satisfied.
Only after an analogous allegorical cleansing can any genuine regeneration
of England occur” (269).
The Water-Babies
; Water Motif
; Cleanliness
; Sanitation
; Religion
; Social
and Political Views .
Reboul, Marc. “Charles Kingsley: The Rector
in the City,” in Jean-Paul Hulin and Pierre Coustillas (eds.) Victorian
Writers and the City (Lille: Publications de l'Université de Lille
III, 1979): 41-72.
Reboul argues that Kingsley influenced by the Romantics and Neo-Platonic thought
had come to regard contemporary city life to be the opposite of the Divine.
This view was reinforced by such experiences as the Bristol Riots of 1831,
the 1849 cholera epidemic in London’s East End districts of Bermondsey and
Jacob’s Island, and the appalling working conditions endured by tailors and
others in London’s sweat shops. Kingsley’s solution to the evils of
city life involved an elimination of man’s exploitation of man and a Christianization
and a humanization of the excesses of capitalism. Above all, Kingsley,
turning in his later years into an optimistic town-planner, viewed thorough
sanitation reform as the vehicle that would rebuild cities in the image of
God’s kingdom on earth. Increasingly Kingsley believed “that man was
now in a position to conquer and civilise Nature, to master his environment,
and to lay the foundations of a new society, in which cities would no longer
appear as diseased patches soiling the purity of the landscape, but as nuclei
of organisation shining with all the brightness of their regenerated state”
(62).
Christian
Socialism ; Sanitation
; Capitalism
; Town-planning
.
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.
Schilling, Bernard N. “Kingsley,” in Human Dignity and the Great
Victorians (New York: Columbia University Press, 1946): 96-122.
Schilling examines Kingsley's work as a humanitarian and his efforts to dignify
the life of England's poor. "Kingsley achieved a working synthesis
between his religion and his radicalism; he made it seem as if he had to
be a humanitarian reformer because of the implications which he saw in religion,
not in spite of them" (96). Schilling discusses Kingsley's work on
behalf of sanitary reform and his campaign against the terrible conditions
of the sweated tailoring trade, stressing Kingsley's belief that many societal
problems had their underlying cause in laissez-faire capitalism. He
also considers Kingsley's advocacy of popular medical instruction and of
cooperative movements, his plans to make art, amusement, country life and
education more available to the public, and his staunch promotion of public
education. Though Kingsley became increasingly conservative and came
to embrace a form of feudalism as he aged, Schilling concludes that he "bore
the mark of all great humanitarians - the union of compassion, humaneness,
and optimism" (122).
Overview
; Sanitation
; Social
and Political Views ; Religion
; Education
; Christian
Socialism .
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