Adams, James Eli. “Pater’s Muscular Aestheticism,”
in Hall, Donald E. (ed.). Muscular Christianity: Embodying the Victorian
Age (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1994): 215-240.
Adams argues that though many would consider that the views of Kingsley and
Walter Pater have little in common and that much of Kingsley's muscularity
was antipathetic to Pater, the latter's thoughts on Greece bear strong connections
to Kingsley's muscular aesthetic of the male body. In particular, Kingsley's
muscular Christianity and celebration of the male body in effect constituted
"an essential precedent for Pater's aestheticism" (235).
Walter Pater
; Manliness
; Sexuality; Greek Art
; Winckelmann
.
Alderson, David. Mansex Fine: Religion, Manliness
and Imperialism in Nineteenth-Century British Culture (Manchester and
New York: Manchester University Press, 1998).
Alderson analyzes how certain nineteenth century writers responded to contemporary
debates about gender, religion, and nation. In his treatment of Kingsley
and Alton Locke, he discusses how a particularly Anglo-Saxon Christian
manliness evolved as a reaction to Catholicism and revolution and became
identifiable with British imperial culture. In his later treatment of Kingsley’s
polemics against Newman, Alderson stresses that Kingsley’s strong antipathy
to Catholicism was largely based on what he felt to be that religion’s effeminacy
and asceticism. By implication, Protestantism, the true British religion,
was the epitome of manliness.
Alton Locke;
Manliness;
Imperialism;
Newman;
Religion.
Bradstock, Andrew. “'A Man of God is a
Holy Man': Spurgeon, Luther and 'Holy Boldness',” in Andrew Bradstock, Sean
Gill, Anne Hogan, and Sue Morgan (eds.) Masculinity and Spirituality in
Victorian Culture (Basingstoke, U.K.: Macmillan, 2000): 209-225.
There are many references to Kingsley in this study of Charles Haddon Spurgeon,
particularly with respect to the two men's views on aspects of manliness
and muscular Christianity.
Spurgeon
; Manliness
; Muscular
Christianity ; Celibacy
.
Dodd, Philip. “Gender and Cornwall: Charles
Kingsley to Daphne du Maurier,” in K. D. M. Snell (ed.) The Regional
Novel in Britain and Ireland, 1800-1990 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1998): 119-135.
Dodd declares that the West Country in Two Years Ago is a region signifying
for Kingsley a “forward-looking, confident masculinity” (125). Its
manly Protestant values complement the muscular Tom Thurnall while the London
world is the appropriate place for the effete poet Elsley Vavasour.
Two Years
Ago ; Cornwall
; Devon ;
Manliness
.
Engelhardt, Carol Marie. “Victorian Masculinity
and the Virgin Mary,” in Andrew Bradstock, Sean Gill, Anne Hogan, and Sue
Morgan (eds.) Masculinity and Spirituality in Victorian Culture (Basingstoke,
U.K.: Macmillan, 2000): 44-57.
In this article Engelhardt considers how the understanding of the Virgin Mary
of three Victorian clergymen, Kingsley, Edward Pusey and Frederick Faber,
was related to their view of contemporary masculine identity and, in particular,
how each used the Virgin Mary to define his own masculinity. Kingsley's
dislike of Mary was, as Engelhardy points out, understandable for one who
hated Catholicism. However, she also relates his antipathy to the power that
Catholics ascribe to Mary. Kingsley shared the common Victorian view
of the domesticity of women and that it was the role of females to inspire
men but that they themselves should not aspire to power. Engelhardt
also contends that Kingsley's hostile attitude to Mary was related to fears
about his own masculinity. Early in his life Kingsley himself
had felt a pull towards Catholicism, a religion he later came to view as
a female-oriented and therefore unmanly. "It was no wonder, then, that
Kingsley felt compelled to reject vociferously the most feminine part of
this allegedly effeminate religion. Kingsley was not just denouncing
Mary; he was repudiating what he considered to be his own weakness and error
in desiring Rome" (47).
Virgin Mary
; Manliness
; Catholicism
; Yeast.
Fasick, Laura. “The Failure of Fatherhood:
Maleness and Its Discontents in Charles Kingsley,” Children's Literature
Association Quarterly Vol. 18, No. 3 (Fall 1993): 106-111.
Fasick declares that Kingsley's ideal of hyper-masculinity coexisted with
his recognition of the need of such moral qualities of humility, gentleness,
and patience. However, she contends that Kingsley, who tended to prize
the former ideal more highly, found it difficult to combine these two distinct
spectra and certainly failed to illustrate their union in his novels.
"Despite his homage to gentleness and patience, Kingley's real attraction
is apparently to the displays of power and aggression with which he adorns
his novels" (109).
Muscular
Christianity ; Manliness
; Fatherhood
; The
Water-Babies ; Westward-Ho!
.
Fasick, Laura. “The Seduction of Celibacy: Threats
to Male Sexual Identity in Charles Kingsley’s Writings,” in Jay Losey and
William D. Brewer (eds.) Mapping Male Sexuality: Nineteenth Century England
( Madison, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2000): 215-232.
Fasick considers the long English tradition that strong sexual interest in
females is injurious to true manliness. However, she argues that a strong
basis for Kingsley’s anti-Catholic writings and his altercation with Newman
was his conviction that Roman Catholic celibacy rather than sexual indulgence
was frequently a source for effeminacy. Kingsley, an ardent advocate of marriage,
was convinced that sexual abstinence took away from man’s masculinity as
well as posed both physical and spiritual dangers. For Kingsley celibacy was
all too often an act of self indulgence rather than one of self denial.
Manliness;
Sexuality
; Celibacy
; Newman
; Catholicism
Gay, Peter. “The Manliness of Christ,”
in R. W. Davis and R. J. Helmstadter (eds) Religion and Irreligion in
Victorian Society: Essays in Honor of R. K. Webb (London and New York:
Routledge, 1992): 102-116.
Gay declares that manliness for Kingsley was intimately connected with a
distinct tenderness. Though he repeatedly castigated what he viewed
as the effeminacy of the Roman Catholic and High Anglican clergy, he manifested
a number of female qualities himself. “It was this ‘feminine’ side in
him that allowed Kingsley to complicate his definition of heroism by adding
to muscular qualities, justice, restraint, modesty, and the readiness for
self-sacrifice” (115).
Muscular
Christianity ; Manliness
.
Haralson, Eric. “James’s The American
: A (New)man is Being Beaten,” American Literature Vol. 64, No. 3
(September 1992): 475-495.
Haralson examines the influence of Kingsley’s notions of manliness and muscular
Christianity on Henry James’s characterization in his novels, particularly
the representation of Christopher Newman in The American (1877).
Though James in his youth was drawn to aspects of the manly hero, his views
were by no means identical to those of Kingsley. “To read James’s four
reviews of Kingsley between 1865 and 1877 . . . is to watch him struggle
to come to terms with a youthful enthusiasm that was fast fading” (477).
In particular, Kingsley’s anti-intellectual strain in his heroes was objectionable
to James. Still, as Haralson treats at length, James used the Kingsleyan
hero as a point of departure in his depiction of Christopher Newman.
Haralson also briefly sketches the influence of Kingsley’s manly hero on
James’s portrayal of such protagonists as Caspar Goodwood in The Portrait
of a Lady (1881), Basil Ransom in The Bostonians (1886), and Nick
Dormer in The Tragic Muse (1890).
Manliness
; Muscular
Christianity ; James, Henry
.
Labbe, Jacqueline M. “The Godhead Regendered
in Victorian Children’s Literature,” in Alice Jenkins and Juliet John (eds.)
Rereading Victorian Fiction (UK: Macmillan, 2000): 96-114.
Labbe argues that many texts of Victorian children’s literature substituted
the Wise Woman, the Fairy Godmother, for God the Father as the sage of choice.
Christianity, in short, was being feminized. In The Water-Babies
such “female deities” as Mother Carey, Mrs Doasyouwouldbedoneby, and Mrs
Bedonebyasyoudid with their female virtues of love, compassion and inherent
knowledge are more important than the more manly qualities in the divine
order. “In Kingsley’s version of the female Christ, he realigns Christ’s
gender, or rather his sex; this female Christ poses no threat to established
gender roles, but rather makes plain the femininity of Christ’s character”
(104).
Females ;
Religion
; Manliness
; The
Water-Babies .
Lucas, John A. “Victorian 'Muscular Christianity':
Prologue to the Olympic Games Philosophy,” Olympic Review Vol. 99/100
(1976): 49-52.
Lucas discusses the origin of and the influences on the philosophy of sport
of Baron Pierre de Coupertin (1863-1937), founder of the modern Olympic Games.
He reveals that Coupertin’s Pedagogie Sportive (1934) credits Kingsley,
as well as Arnold, with changing the definition and the course of non-professional
sport.
Sport ; Muscular
Christianity ; Manliness
.
Maison, Margaret M. The Victorian Vision:
Studies in the Victorian Novel (New York: Sheed & Ward, 1961).
Maison considers Kingsley’s religious and spiritual thought as represented
in his novels. She declares that matters of the soul tend to be well
overshadowed in these works by stories of adventure, by depictions of physical
activity, by scenes of daring and so on. However, one pervasive religious
theme in Kingsley’s novels is the spiritual development of the characters
through strong physical activity. She contends that one of Kingsley’s
most dominant beliefs is that man’s soul necessarily suffers from long exposure
to dire physical conditions. It was as important a duty of the parson,
Kingsley believed, to care for social, economic, and political reform as
to cater to more spiritual elements. “Thus might Kingsley answer any
critic likely to accuse him of preferring sanitation to meditation” (127).
Maison also briefly considers Kingsley’s desire to reconcile religion with
science.
Religion
; Manliness
; Science
; Novels
.
Muller, Charles H.
“The Heroes: Kingsley’s Moral Lessons,” Textures Vol. 2 (1986):
37-44.
Muller sees The Heroes, Kingsley’s retelling of the Greek legends,
as “almost undisguised moral lessons. This is clear from the biblical
style, the personal addresses to the reader, the moral stance and numerous
moral dictums and exhortations spun around the old Greek heroes who are presented
as models of positive initiative, daring, courage and majesty – moral models
for the young reader to admire and emulate” (37).
Heroes, The
; Moral Lessons
; Religion
; Manliness
; Females
.
Newsome. David. Godliness and Good Learning:
Four Studies on a Victorian Ideal (London: Cassell, 1961).
Mention of Kingsley occurs frequently in Newsome’s work. Newsome is
particularly interested in Kingsley’s notion of manliness which he views as
being very similar to the robustness, feistiness and vigorous vitality of
thumos, as opposed to the higher excellence of arete,
equated by Coleridge with manliness. Newsome also stresses that Kingsley,
the first to combine manliness with godliness, considered manliness to be
“an antidote to the poison of effeminacy – the most insidious weapon of the
Tractarians – which was sapping the vitality of the Anglican Church” (207).
Manliness for Kingsley was using to the full all the qualities with which
God has endowed men, including the sexual function. That is why Roman
Catholicism’s celibacy provided strong evidence of that religion’s lack of
manliness and its consequent falling away from appropriate godliness.
Manliness
; Muscular
Christianity ; Sexuality
; Celibacy
; Catholicism
.
Oldstone-Moore, Christopher. “The Beard Movement in Victorian
Britain.” Victorian Studies 48, no. 1 (Autumn 2005): 7-34.
Oldstone-Moore discusses the mid-nineteenth phenomenon of full beards
becoming much more common among the Victorian era’s respectable mainstream.
The image of manliness represented by the beard as opposed to the feminine
smoothness of modern society was a favorite metaphor for Kingsley. Oldstone-Moore
points to the manly bearded Claude Mellot of Yeast who associates
shaving with cowardice and deceit. According to Oldstone-Moore, one might
indeed identify a beard code in Westward Ho! by which the reader can
determine a character’s moral worth by the hirsuteness or smoothness of his
face. However, Kingsley’s advocacy of bearded masculinity did not imply support
for mere forceful physicality. Rather, for Kingsley and others beards were
to be associated with reason and self-control. “One might say that the beard
was the sign of the civilized warrior—a man who retains the nature of essential
manhood, yet remains within the bounds of Christian civility” (26).
Beards;
Manliness.
Rosen, David. "The Volcano and the Cathedral:
Muscular Christianity and the Origins of Primal Manliness," in Hall, Donald
E. (ed.). Muscular Christianity: Embodying the Victorian Age (Cambridge,
U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1994): 17-44.
David Rosen provides a lengthy analysis of the development of Kingsley's views
on muscular Christianity and manliness. He stresses that these were complex,
many-sided notions and that Kingsley's views on these topics, as well as
his practical involvement in complementary areas, continuously evolved throughout
his life. Rosen argues that among the many influences on Kingsley's concept
of manliness was the notion of Platonic thumos which Kingsley considered
was a primal manly force, the root of all virtue and which was manifested
through sex, fighting, and morality. Rosen contends that Kingsley's views
on manliness and related topics were highly influential and that diverse
notions of Anglo-American masculinity from the mid-nineteenth century to
the present owe much to Kingsley.
Manliness
; Muscular
Christianity ; Sexuality
; Plato ;
Carlyle
; Hughes,
Thomas .
Schiefelbein, Michael.
“'Blighted' by a 'Upas-Shadow': Catholicism’s Function for Kingsley in Westward
Ho!,” Victorian Newsletter Vol. 94 (Fall 1998): 10-17.
Schiefelbein examines Kingsley's severe characterizations
of Catholics in Westward Ho!, especially two of his keenest bete
noires, Catholics' worship of the Virgin Mary and Catholicism's embrace
of asceticism and condemnation of the flesh. Kingsley, advocate of muscular
Christianity and espouser of manliness, detested what he considered to be
effeminate "Mariolatry" which was responsible for weakness and womanishness
in society. He also condemned the asceticism of the Jesuits Parsons
and Campion which he held to be an unnatural rejection of God-given impulses.
They were "spiritual grotesques" (15). However, Schiefelbein also argues
that Kingsley reveals his own ascetic impulses and his attraction to monkish
ways in Westward Ho! and reconciles the opposite pulls of asceticism
and carnal and sexual nature. Schiefelbein concludes that while "one
may certainly object to the role Kingsley assigns to Catholicism . . . it
becomes an effective foil for enlightening his readers - and, very likely,
for reminding himself - of the dangers of Manicheanism" (16).
Westward
Ho! ; Religion
; Catholicism
; Virgin
Mary ; Muscular
Christianity ; Sexuality
; Manliness
.
Tozer, Malcolm. "Charles Kingsley and the 'Muscular
Christian' Ideal of Manliness," Physical Education Review Vol. 8, No.
1 (1985): 35-40.
Tozer sketches Kingsley’s life and works paying particular attention to his
views on manliness and its relation to muscular Christianity. He declares
that Kingsley was the individual who was most responsible for acquainting
the English with the Romantic, Christian and Chivalric ideal of manliness,
the ideal that had such a strong influence on the subsequent development
of games and outdoor pursuits in education.
Overview
; Manliness
; Muscular
Christianity ; Education
.
Tozer, Malcolm. “Thomas Hughes: ‘Tom Brown’
versus ‘True Manliness’,” Physical Education Review Vol. 12, No. 1
(1989): 44-48.
Tozer declares that Thomas Hughes’s Tom Brown’s Schooldays was largely
responsible for the emphasis of the physical in the definition of the Victorian
gentlemen and for the era’s “emerging clamour of hearty athleticism” (44).
Thus, Tozer contends, Hughes severely distorted the far broader ideal of
manliness of his Christian Socialist associates, Charles Kingsley and F.
D. Maurice.
Manliness
; Hughes,
Thomas ; Muscular
Christianity ; Christian
Socialism .
Tuss, Alex J. “Divergent and Conflicting Voices:
Victorian Images of the Male,” Journal of Men’s Studies Vol. 4, No.
1 (31 August, 1995): 43-57.
In his examination of the many diverse and contradictory images of
masculinity in Victorian literature, Tuss briefly considers the scene of
the fox hunt in Yeast. He considers how Lancelot Smith failed to live
up to the accepted norms of right conduct for the male and consequently suffered
humiliation.
Muscular
Christianity ; Manliness
; Yeast
.
Vance, Norman. “Kingsley’s Christian Manliness,”
Theology Vol. LXXVIII, No. 655 (January 1975): 30-38.
Vance declares that Plato's doctrine of thumos was central to Kingsley's
notion of manliness. In addition, his ideal of manliness required a
sound religious basis as well as a distinct moral independence that eshews
fatalism and moral inertia. Rejecting what he called the Manichaeism
of some Tractarians and Evangelicals who finding the world hopelessly evil
withdraw from it, Kingsley held that the ideal of true Christian manliness
required working strenuously within the world to ameliorate it. Kingsley
also embraced the more common understanding of manliness by lauding the cultivation
of the body by sport and physical exertion.
Muscular
Christianity ; Manliness
; Religion
; Plato .
Vance, Norman. The Sinews of the Spirit:
The Ideal of Christian Manliness in Victorian Literature and Religious Thought
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985).
Vance devotes two chapters to Kingsley's life, thought, and literary works
paying particular attention to themes of the relationship of manliness to
religion in his novels. "Christian manliness was not just an ideal in
Kingsley's fiction, it was the basis of his practical work as pastor, teacher
and reformer and the essence of his life and experience" (107).
Overview
; Yeast
; Alton
Locke ; Hypatia ;
Westward
Ho! ; Two Years
Ago ; Hereward
the Wake ; Muscular
Christianity ; Manliness
; Newman
Controversy .
Wee, C. J. W.-L. "Christian Manliness and National
Identity: The Problematic Construction of a Racially 'Pure' Nation," in Hall,
Donald E. (ed.). Muscular Christianity: Embodying the Victorian
Age (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1994): 66-88.
Wee discusses how Kingsley used the innovative treatment of the relationship
of Christianity to race and cultural history in the novels Alton Locke
and Westward Ho! "in a process of national self-definition, through
what might be called 'cultural nationalism'." Wee argues that in doing so
"Kingsley also reveals the problems surrounding the construction of a pure
national-imperial identity based on racial and religious heritage, as he
attempted to propagate the potent but unstable image of a masculine, charismatic,
and authoritative Englishman who stands as a representative of a resolutely
Anglo-Saxon and Protestant nation-empire" (67).
Yeast;
Westward
Ho! ; Manliness
; Muscular
Christianity ; Imperialism
; Racial
Prejudices ; Social
and Political Views .
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