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
.
Brantlinger, Patrick, “Bluebooks, the
Social
Organism, and the Victorian Novel,” Criticism: A Quarterly for
Literature
and the Arts Vol. XIV, No. 4 (Fall 1972): 328-344.
Brantlinger discusses how several early Victorian writers were
influenced by parliamentary bluebooks and other official and social
investigations. He briefly refers to the example of Lancelot,
hero of Kingsley’s Yeast who immersed himself in a plethora of
bluebooks and other reports in his examination of the
‘Condition-of-the-Poor question'. It was partly though
the study of such reports that Lancelot's social conscience was
stirred.
Blue
Books
; Yeast
;
Social and Political Novel
.
Brunskill, F.
R.
“Charles Kingsley's Social Philosophy,” Primitive Methodist
Quarterly
Review Vol. 25 (April 1903): 340-349.
Brunskill gives an ornate account of Kingsley’s work on behalf of the
poor
and less privileged and discusses his social and political views.
Social
and Political Views
; Social
and Political Novel
.
Chapman, Raymond. The Victorian
Debate:
English Literature and Society 1832-1901 (New York: Basic Books,
1968).
Chapman briefly discusses Kingsley’s major social and political novels,
Yeast (1848), Alton Locke, Tailor and Poet (1850), Hypatia
(1853), and Two Years Ago (1857). He also
mentions The Water
Babies (1863) for its treatment of child labor and social
justice.
Chapman declares that Kingsley wrote in fiction about some of the
topics
with which Maurice was dealing in more theological terms. “From
Maurice
he learned that the needs of the time could be a pragmatic sanction for
Christianity;
from Carlyle, how to subordinate reason to emotion. The
combination
was, to say the least, a lively one. Like Samuel Butler, so
different in other ways, Kingsley wrote best about those things which
he had made into
a personal grievance” (135).
Social
and Political Novel
; Yeast
; Alton
Locke
; Hypatia
; Two
Years Ago
; The
Water Babies
.
Childers, Joseph
W.
“Alton Locke and the Religion of Chartism,” in Novel
Possibilities:
Fiction and the Formation of Early Victorian Culture (Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1995): 132-157.
In his analysis of Alton Locke
Childers focuses in particular on the relationship between politics and
religion. He
argues that the spiritual reform advocated, the "religion of Chartism",
alleviates
the fear of the middle classes of a revolt based on immorality or
infidelity,
since the reform is strongly linked to the tenets of religion, of
Christianity.
However, the advocacy has little social value as long as it remains the
subjective
view only of Alton. For real change to be effected, these views
must
be embraced by a wider public.
Alton
Locke ;
Religion
; Chartism
; Social
and Political Novel
.
Courtney, Janet E. “Charles
Kingsley,” Fortnightly Review Vol. 105 (Jan-June 1919): 949-957.
In the centenary year of Kingsley’s birth Courtney offers a brief
general outline of the author’s life and principal works. She
praises Kingsley’s historical novels for their readability though
acknowledging the presence of many didactic passages. She
criticizes, however, the modern novels, i.e. Yeast, Two Years Ago,
and Alton Locke for their old-fashionedness. Their chief
merit lies in their treatment of social questions rather in their
literary skill. On the other hand, Courtney lauds the children’s
stories
for their charm and ability to delight. Courtney also discusses the
somewhat
overlooked study of St. Elizabeth of Hungary, The Saint’s Tragedy
(1848). Though stressing the great interest and attention
Kingsley
paid to this early work, Courtney criticizes its pervasive
didacticism. “It is a sermon against monkishness and in praise of
wedded love, more interesting
to read, no doubt, than Kingsley’s sermons strictly so-called, but it
does
not differ from them essentially” (954).
Overview
;
Saint’s Tragedy, The ;
Social and Political Novel
.
Cripps, Elizabeth A. "Introduction," Alton
Locke, Tailor and Poet: An Autobiography (Oxford; New York: Oxford
University Press, 1983): vii-xx.
Cripps introduces Alton Locke by considering the context of the
troubled
Chartist times in which it was both written and set. She also
briefly
discusses the novel's publication history, its reception by the
critics,
and its representation of many of Kingsley's social and political
views.
She regrets on literary grounds that Kingsley revised the Cambridge
part
of the novel. Praising for the most part the characterization in
the
novel, Cripps also lauds its graphic depictions.
Alton
Locke ;
Chartism
; Social
and Political Novel
;
Social and Political Views
; Cambridge
University
;
Characterization in Novels
.
Dottin, Françoise. “Chartism
and
Christian Socialism in Alton Locke,” Politics in Literature
in
the Nineteenth Century (Lille: Centre d'Etudes Victoriennes, U. de
Lille,
1974): 31-59.
Dottin discusses Kingsley's social and political views as represented
in Alton Locke, especially those relating to Chartism and
Christian Socialism, as well as his own practical endeavors in these
areas. She concludes that while Kingsley is somewhat difficult to
categorize, he is "neither a
revolutionary nor a fawning aristocrat", and that he is best described
by
the two words Christian and socialist (54).
Alton
Locke ;
Chartism
;
Christian Socialism
;
Social and Political Views
; Social
and Political Novel
.
Gottlieb, Evan M. "Charles Kingsley, the
Romantic
Legacy, and the Unmaking of the Working-Class Intellectual," Victorian
Literature and Culture (VLC) Vol 29, No. 1 (2001): 51-65.
Gottlieb provides an interpretation of Alton Locke that is
dissimilar to many other treatments of the industrial novel in general
and Kinglsey's novel in particular. He argues that Alton
Locke and the representation of the working-class poet are "safely
apolitical" and in fact serve the interests
of the middle classes. The prevailing views of the narrator and
novel
succeed, in fact, in espousing middle-class values more than the
concerns
of the working classes. "The ideological work of Alton Locke
is to reassure its middle-class readers that it is not possible for a
working-class
person to be an intellectual and remain loyal to his class" (63).
The
novel, in short, reassures middle-class readers who may be fearful of a
workers'
revolution.
Alton
Locke
;
Social and Political Views
; Social
and Political Novel
; Romantic
Poets
; Political
thought, Influences on his
.
Kettle, Arnold. “The Early Victorian
Social-Problem Novel,” in Boris Ford (ed.) From Dickens to Hardy: A
Guide to English Literature Vol. 6. 2nd ed. (London: Cassell,
1966; this ed. first published 1963): 169-187.
Yeast, according to Kettle, is a combination of Mrs.
Gaskell’s naturalistic style and some of the more mystical and romantic
aspects of Disraeli’s.
Though it is often categorized as a religious novel, its social rather
than
its religious message was responsible for its contemporary
objectionable
reputation. Kettle considers Alton Locke to be a better
novel
than Yeast. He praises especially its treatment of social
problems
and the horrendous work conditions suffered by the tailors in their
sweat-shops.
Though it is clearly a “propaganda novel”, it is more than that. “
Alton Locke, for all its crudities and ‘dated’ quality, for all its
lack
of the sort of art and intelligence one associates with those writers
conscious
of ‘the novel as an art form', can still move us today” (184).
Social
and Political Novel
; Yeast
; Alton
Locke ;
Social and Political Views
.
Kijinski, John L. “Charles Kingsley's Yeast
: Brotherhood and the Condition of England,” VIJ: Victorians
Institute Journal Vol. 13 (1985): 97-109.
In his analysis of the novel Yeast Kijinski declares that the
novel
despite its "bland didacticism" is very representative of the period,
the
hungry forties. He argues that the novel also provides a strong
insight
into a commonly held ideological stance of the time, namely that the
growing
antipathy between the haves and the have-nots might be improved without
force,
unions, redistribution of wealth if only all social classes acted
sympathetically
and humanely in the true belief that everyone is a member of the same
common
family.
Yeast
;
Social and Political Novel
;
Social and Political Views
; Catholicism
.
Stoddard, Francis Hovey. The
Evolution
of the English Novel (London: Macmillan, 1909; first published
1900).
In his examination of the English novel of purpose, Stoddard declares
that Yeast and Alton Locke are slighter and less
important than Mrs. Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin, the problem of
slavery being far
more serious than the social, industrial and political questions dealt
with
by Kingsley. Nevertheless, the latter’s novels were influential
in
highlighting these questions and in so doing “notably advanced the
cause of
freedom” in England (174).
Social
and Political Novel
; Yeast
; Alton
Locke .
Williams, A. R. "Alton Locke by
Charles
Kingsley (1850)," East London Papers Vol. 13 (Summer 1970):
36-40.
Williams counts Kingsley among those Victorian writers who sought to
reveal
in their works society’s evils to indifferent and oblivious middle and
upper
classes. In particular, Alton Locke is important for
“historians
of London’s East End because it portrays vividly and, as far as one can
tell,
reliably, the conditions of the sweated tailors of this district in the
middle
of the nineteenth century” (37). Williams sees Kingsley as more
than
just a depicter of societal problems. As a solution Kingsley
advocated
three prongs of attack: the masses’ self-improvement through education,
organization
in trade unions, and governmental reform.
Social
and Political Novel
; Alton
Locke ;
Social and Political Views
.
Williams,
Raymond. Culture and Society 1780-1950 (Harmondsworth,
Middlesex: Penguin,
1977; first published 1958).
Williams in his brief examination of the “extremely discursive” Alton
Locke praises much of the background depiction of the novel.
He stresses
the importance of the work’s conclusion. While Chartism and the
plight
of the workers are treated sympathetically throughout, the true
solution
to life’s problems resides in the acceptance of God. Williams
also
points to the novel’s preface where Kingsley argues that “The
regeneration
of society . . . will meanwhile proceed under the leadership of a truly
enlightened
aristocracy. It will be a movement towards democracy, but not to
that
‘tyranny of numbers’ of which the dangers have been seen in the United
States”
(112).
Alton
Locke ;
Social and Political Novel
; Chartism
.
|