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.
Allen, Peter. “Christian Socialism and
the Broad Church Circle,” Dalhousie Review Vol. 49 (Spring, 1969):
58-68.
Allen discusses Kingsley’s involvement in the Christian Socialist movement
of 1848-1854. He argues that most of the Christian Socialists were members
of the Broad Church circle and that political radicalism or political socialism
was far from being their principal concern. Rather, they believed that
moral or educational reform of the working classes must precede political
action, a viewpoint strongly adhered to by Kingsley. Though a minority
of the Christian Socialists, for example J. M. Ludlow, advocated extreme
political reform, Allen suggests that the evidence indicates “that
we cannot understand Christian Socialism and its leaders if we look only
to the history of political radicalism, but that the movement might appear
in a new and valuable light through a thorough study of the Broad Church
circle. Rather than seeing Christian Socialism as primarily a political
movement diverted from its true aims, we should, I think, see it as an outgrowth
of a school of religious thought and of a certain intellectual and social
group in Victorian society” (66-67).
Christian
Socialism ; Religion
; Social
and Political Views .
Baker, Joseph Ellis. The Novel and the
Oxford Movement (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1932): 88-100.
Baker argues that Kingsley’s hostility to the Oxford Movement was based on
a quite different view concerning the nature of man. Whereas the Oxford
Movement held that man's nature was essentially sinful, Kingsley, “of the
school of Rousseau”, believed that it was essentially good (88). Baker
reviews the novels of this “pugnacious Protestant” for anti-Catholic sentiments
(99). “Though Kingsley’s pictures of Tractarians are so obviously prejudiced
that it is hardly necessary to correct them, his comments help to reveal
the core of his own vigorous mind, and the setting of the Oxford Movement
within the framework of other mid-century ideas” (100).
Oxford
Movement (Tractarianism) ; Novels ;
Catholicism
; Religion
.
Blinderman, Charles S. “Huxley and Kingsley,”
Victorian Newsletter No. 20 (1961): 25-28.
Blinderman studies the relationship between Kingsley and T. H. Huxley.
Both men enjoyed a close personal friendship. However, Blinderman argues
that despite such surface similarities as their mutual approval of determinism
and Stoicism, their dislike of Positivism, their popularization of science,
and the fact that both were charged with unorthodoxy, in certain fundamental
respects, particularly their underlying attitudes to science and to religion,
they were quite dissimilar and distinct. “A study of the relationship
between Huxley and Kingsley suggests that while friendship can provide a
forum for the cordial debate of ultimate issues, ideological differences,
however, obscured by social amenities, prevail as barriers to the reconciliation
of irreconcilable world-views” (28).
Huxley ;
Science
; Religion
.
Brinton, Crane. English Political Thought
in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1954;
first published 1933).
Brinton provides an overview of Kingsley’s life and his major social and
political views. While his Christian Socialism was by no means a system,
Kingsley held that a Christian Socialist society would indeed be hierarchical
where each one's place is determined by his moral value as well as democratic
in the sense that each one's place has been allotted by God. Brinton
considers that Kingsley’s ideal society was based on older English societies
where different social classes “were knit together by habits which were genuine
human relationships”. His “programme is singularly like
that of Tory Democracy” (125). Kingsley’s paternalism did not signify
that he rejected competition. Competition was good but workers must
first be members of cooperative associations, an ideal similar to “modern
guild Socialism” (126). While Brinton considers that Kingsley’s achievements
were not insignificant, his ideals based on his religious faith could accomplish
little to improve the very practical ills of working class and under-privileged
society. “His God, his virtue, his England, made too many promises
to the flesh – promises unfulfilled to the common man. For the uncommon
man, his faith was even more inadequate. Taste and intellect alike
recoil from the simplicities of a universe on the pattern of Eversley” (130).
Social
and Political Views ; Alton Locke
; Christian
Socialism ; Religion
; Science
; Evolution
; Democracy
; Capitalism
; Teutons
.
Buckley, Jerome Hamilton.
The Victorian Temper: A Study in Literary Culture (London: Frank
Cass 1966; first published 1952).
Buckley makes numerous diverse references to Kingsley. With respect
to Kingsley’s attitude to religion and Mammon worship Buckley stresses his
detestation for the manifest evils of the industrial revolution and the harm
they cause to body and soul. Yet Kingsley was assured that the new
age was here to stay and that religion would aid in combating an excessive
focus on materialism. “If his victory was never won, he yet succeeded
more than any other popular apologist in reminding the mid-Victorians that
the objects of religion might animate their common activity no less than
the lonely meditations of the brooding conscience” (123).
Religion
.
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 .
Conacher, W. M. “Charles Kingsley,” Queen’s
Quarterly Vol. 45 (1938): 503-511.
Conacher presents a sketch of Kingsley’s life and works. He praises
the characterization in Hereward the Wake; it surpasses that of Bulwer
Lytton’s Harold and that of Scott’s Ivanhoe . While he criticizes
Kingsley’s anti-Catholic treatment in Westward Ho! as being mere bigotry
and not based on proper historical facts, he admires the novel’s color and
romance. Though Hypatia has matter for a masterpiece, “haste, over-enthusiasm,
and lack of artistry have spoiled it” (509). Alton Locke is modern
in its sympathy for the working classes and its political views, while Yeast,
though the work of a young author, is praised for its “generous feeling”
(510). Kingsley, according to Conacher, “railed at John Bull in life
and in letters and was essentially in the end John Bull himself” (511).
Overview
; Novels
; Religion
; Catholicism.
Cunningham, Valentine. "Soiled Fairy: The
Water-Babies 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
.
Cowling, Maurice. Religion and Public Doctrine
in Modern England. 3 Vols. Vol. III: Accommodations (Cambridge,
England; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001).
Provides a brief overview of Kingsley's religious views, especially as revealed
in his novels.
Religion
Daumas, Phillippe. “Charles Kingsley's
Style in Alton Locke,” Les Langues Modernes Vol. 63 (1969):
169-75.
Daumas argues that due to Kingsley’s conflicting views on Chartism there
is a certain mystification in Alton Locke. Though the novel
seems to be an advocacy of Chartism and social reform, the reader when finished
understands that it is really an espousal of charity and Christianity.
“Contrary to what one had been led to think, Alton Locke is not a
tract in support of socialism, but a vindication of Kingsley’s own conception
of Christianity” (169).
Alton Locke
; Chartism
; Social
and Political Views ; Religion
.
Dawson, Carl. "Polemics: Charles Kingsley and
Alton Locke," in his Victorian Noon: English Literature in
1850 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979): 179-202.
Dawson provides an overview of Kingsley’s character, his social and religious
views, especially those on Roman Catholicism, and his involvement in and
his diverse attitudes towards socialism. He discusses Alton Locke
, “perhaps one of the oddest literary documents of nineteenth-century England”
(180), declaring that its recognition in modern times owes something to Kingsley’s
treatment being relevant to contemporary Marxist assessments of literature.
“Kingsley articulates the sense of waste in his protagonist’s life;
he equates Alton with the social upheavals of his age, setting him against
middle-class virtues and assumptions; and he creates in Alton a psychic battle
between social activism and pastoral escape”. In addition, “
Alton Locke could figure in the survey that Georg Lukács, makes
of the middling hero in nineteenth-century historical fiction” (201).
Overview
; Social
and Political Views ; Religion
; Catholicism
; Alton
Locke ; Yeast.
Downes, David Anthony. “Reverend Charles
Kingsley: Prophet of Convulsion,” in The Temper of Victorian Belief: Studies
in the Religious Novels of Pater, Kingsley, and Newman (New York: Twayne,
1972): 48-81.
Downes examines Kingsley’s style, which he terms “plain prophecy”, and his
religious views. He also discusses differences in style and temper
between Kingsley and Newman, arguing that time has effected a “monumental
irony on historical and critical judgment”. He considers Newman to be
a “medieval personalist” whereas Kingsley is a “prophetical modernist” (81).
Hypatia, argues Downes from his lengthy treatment of the novel,
“represents Kingsley’s search for a way of expressing how religious faith
in Christianity happens, and what it means in the most concrete personalist
terms his imagination would conjure. However philosophically vague,
there is an attempt at a kind of phenomenology of faith, what Newman called
‘a grammar of assent.’ The tenability of Christianity as believable
by people encountering their worlds on the most basic human levels is what
Kingsley was striving to examine” (79).
Religion
; Newman
; Hypatia;
History
.
Fasick, Laura. "No Higher Love: Clerical Domesticity
in Kingsley and Eliot." Victorian Newsletter Vol. 48, No. 100 (2001):
1-5.
Fasick argues that two writers as different as Kingsley, an ordained Anglican
minister, and George Eliot, an agnostic, domesticated clergymen in their
fictional representation of them. Both writers, accepting the Victorian stress
on the domesticity of religion, transferred the priest’s most important realm
of action from public reform to that of domestic virtue. Moreover, Kingsley
and Eliot underscore the priest’s romantic and sexual life, especially when
fulfilled in marriage and parenthood, as an important aspect of his human
and moral development. Such development can never be enhanced by celibacy.
Catholicism
; Religion
; Sexuality
; George
Eliot ; Celibacy.
Hanawalt, Mary Wheat, "Charles Kingsley and Science,"
Studies in Philology Vol. 34, No. 4 (October, 1937): 589-611.
Hanawalt examines Kingsley’s interest and endeavors in science, arguing that
his broader philosophy and art have been misunderstood because of the neglect
shown to Kingsley the scientist. To remedy this neglect and this misunderstanding
she discusses firstly, Kingsley’s lifelong interest in science; secondly,
the relation between his science and the art of his novels and poetry; thirdly,
his views on the relation of science to religion and the importance of science
in man’s existence; and, fourthly, the general influence of science on his
philosophy.
Science ;
Religion
.
Hartley, Allan John. The
Novels of Charles Kingsley: A Christian Social Interpretation (Folkestone:
The Hour-Glass Press, 1977).
Hartley in this book-length study interprets Kingsley's
novels in the light of the influence of the Christian Social Movement. He
contends that Kingsley is unusual in using novels to set forth the message
of one whom he, together with many others, viewed as the age's greatest prophet,
F. D. Maurice. "The value of Kingsley's novels ultimately lies less in their
advocacy of liberality and reform, than in their insistent justification
of both on the basis of Christian humanism. Kingsley's inspiration
sprang from Maurice whose reading of the Bible had shown his disciple the
meaning, both of Christianity and of history, and the novels proclaim that
social improvement had necessarily to proceed within the existing framework
of society, which for Kingsley meant a Christian dispensation based on Commandments
engraven on tablets of stone and interpreted by sacrificial love. A
minor prophet proclaiming a minor one, Kingsley thus added a new dimension
to the novel" (169).
Christian
Socialism ; Maurice ;
Religion
; Social
and Political Views ; Novels ;
Yeast
; Alton
Locke ; Hypatia ;
Westward
Ho! ; Two Years
Ago ; Hereward
the Wake .
Hawley, John C., S. J.
“Baptizing the Victorian Epimetheus,” Science et Esprit Vol.
XLIII, No. 3 (1991): 349-354.
Kingsley, declares Hawley, was unusual among Victorian clerics in being an
explicit advocate of technology. However, he was also very aware of
the grave social problems, especially among the working classes, brought about
by technology. Still his main criticism was directed at the spirit
of competition bred by the industrial age. Kingsley had “a complex
response to technology. He never portrayed the pursuit of technology
as a meaningful life in itself; he did, however, recognize its potential
for liberating men and women to engage in such a quest” (354).
Technology
; Science
; Social
and Political Views ; Religion
.
Hawley, John C., S. J. "Charles Kingsley
and the Book of Nature," Anglican and Episcopal History Vol. 61, No.
4 (December 1991): 461-479.
Hawley examines Kingsley as natural theologian and his views on the “meaning”
of nature. He discusses Kingsley’s attempt to bridge the ever widening
gap between the claims of science and religion and to establish a vocabulary
that would be intelligible to and supportive of both fields. In this
respect he provides a comparison of Kingsley’s views on the theological beliefs
of and the search for meaning in Arnold, Huxley, and Darwin. Kingsley’s
aim, according to Hawley, “was to circumvent fears and cynicism, and to move
his readers into a world of scientific endeavor and Christian cooperation.
In choosing the commitment of faith over strict empiricism he became for
many, in an age of increasing dichotomy between the realms of science and
religion, a model of a Christian who hoped that the truths of both would
ultimately coalesce” (479).
Nature ;
Science
; Religion
; Natural
Theology ; Arnold,
Matthew ; Huxley ;
Darwin
.
Hawley, John C., S.J. “Charles Kingsley
and the Via Media,” Thought: a Review of Culture and Ideas
Vol. 67, No. 266 (September 1992): 287-301.
Hawley goes beyond Kingsley’s well-known contretemps with Newman and examines
his numerous other struggles and interactions with a broad group of parties
in the Victorian Church. He discusses the many changes and stages in
the development of Kingsley’s final religious views, arguing that despite
his frequent sectarian antipathies, for example to Roman Catholicism, and
his bigotry, he adopted a middle path and became a staunch advocate of moderate
Anglicanism. “In the face of opposition from virtually all quarters,
Kingsley staunchly defended a position somewhere in the middle, now appealing
to reason, now appealing to authority, frequently emotional and ever-insistent
upon the moral imperative he grounded in Jesus of Nazareth. He embodied
in all his inconsistency an adaptable Christianity . . . a Christianity not
far from today’s norm” (300).
Religion
.
Hawley, John C., S.J. “The Water Babies
as Catechetical Paradigm,” Children's Literature Association Quarterly
Vol. 14, No. 1 (Spring 1989): 19-21.
Hawley declares that The Water-Babies has two principle functions,
to entertain and to teach. The goal of education for Kingsley was ultimately
a religious one. Little Tom’s adventures, his evolutionary progress,
the lessons learned all end in religious salvation. Kingsley also uses
The Water-Babies to show that science and evolution can co-exist
with religion. “With the publication of this novel he offers his most
attractive, deceptively simple presentation of the argument that all purely
scientific explanations of reality would benefit by being placed in the larger
context of Christian revelation” (20).
The Water-Babies
; Religion
; Education
; Science
; Evolution
.
Henkin, Leo J. Darwinism in the English
Novel 1860-1910: The Impact of Evolution on Victorian Fiction (New York:
Russell & Russell, 1963).
For Kingsley the Bible and science were compatible. He welcomed Darwin’s
theories which rendered Nature and all about him more full of divine significance
than ever before. While Kingsley reverenced Nature, “he reverenced
more the will that is above Nature. His reverence for Nature was not
antagonistic, but paid homage to his faith in the supernatural” (146).
Science ;
Religion
; Darwin
; Nature
.
Hickin, Rev. Leonard. “Charles Kingsley,
1819-1875,” The Expository Times Vol. LXXXVI, No. 5 (Feb. 1975): 146-150.
This is an appreciation of the life and works of Kingsley one hundred years
after his death. Hickin focuses on Kingsley’s Christianity, his religious
views and his practical work as a minister. He concludes that he “was
a devoted pastor, a gifted preacher, and an outstanding Christian leader”
(149).
Overview
; Parson, Kingsley
as ; Religion
.
Hope, Norman V. “The Issue Between Newman and
Kingsley: A Reconciliation and a Rejoinder,” Theology Today (6 April,
1949): 77-90.
Hope contends that while Kingsley held that the world is good because God
made it, he was far from being an apologist for all of mid-Victorian civilization.
Rather, he was well aware of the social and economic inequities rampant in
society. Nor was he complacent about how the contemporary Christian religion
was sometimes manifest in society. Hope also observes that it may be thought
“that Kingsley was nearer the mind of Jesus Christ than Newman, who appears
to have had no social conscience whatever.”
Social
and Political Views ; Newman
Controversy ; Religion.
Houghton, Walter E. “The Issue Between
Kingsley and Newman,” Theology Today Vol. IV (April 1947): 81-101.
Houghton argues that the fundamental disagreement between Kingsley and Newman
was the elemental dichotomy between Protestant Liberalism and Christian Orthodoxy.
Though in many respects a conservative and a public enemy of those espousing
the liberal cause, in religion Kingsley followed the liberalism of the likes
of Maurice and Carlyle. While we read such thinkers to understand liberal
ideology, argues Houghton, we study Kingsley to comprehend Protestant Liberalism
in its actual practice.
Catholicism
; Newman
Controversy ; Newman, John
Henry ; Religion
; Protestant
Liberalism .
Huxley, Leonard. Life and Letters of Thomas
Henry Huxley. 2 Vols. (New York: D. Appleton, 1901, c1900).
Particularly interesting are two letters from Huxley to Kingsley. The first
is a reply (23 September, 1860) to a letter of sympathy from Kingsley regarding
the death of Huxley’s young son in which Kingsley sets forth his views on
the purpose of life and his belief in immortality. Huxley’s letter is friendly
and respectful but displays very different views on religion to those of
Kingsley. The second letter (8 November 1866) sets forth Huxley’s reasons
for joining the Jamaica Committee which advocated the prosecution of Governor
Eyre. Kinsley was a supporter of Eyre.
Huxley, T.H.
; Eyre,
Governor ; Religion
; Science.
Irvine, William. Apes, Angels, &
Victorians: The Story of Darwin, Huxley, and Evolution (New York: Time,
1963; 1st published 1955).
Irvine discusses the relationship and correspondence between Kingsley and
Thomas Henry Huxley, stressing their views on science and religion.
Despite their radically different attitudes towards religion, both men had
a strong mutual respect for each other. Irvine mentions the openness
and honesty of Huxley’s attitude towards Kingsley.
Huxley ;
Religion
; Science
.
Jones, Tod E. The Broad Church: A Biography
of a Movement (Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books, 2003).
In his account of the origins and progress of the nineteenth century Broad
Church in England, Jones considers the attitude of Kingsley towards and his
contribution to this movement. Jones stresses Kingsley’s relationship to
F.D. Maurice and in particular how his intellectual views and practical actions
were influenced by the latter.
Religion
; Maurice.
Karl, Frederick R. An Age of Fiction:
The Nineteenth Century British Novel (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1964): 333-337.
In his treatment of Alton Locke Karl focuses on Kingsley’s social and
political views. Locke comes to believe that the Chartist goals, and
all political and social aims, can only be realized if linked to Christianity,
a belief earnestly held by Kingsley. However, Karl declares that Kingsley’s
argument turns into the “hollow rhetoric” of those who, fearing radical change,
advise prudence (335). The working classes must wait until others decide
it is time for their equality; they must not decide for themselves.
Because of what he considers the weakness of this thesis, Karl believes that
Alton Locke has a “flabby intellectual spine”. While the
novel is praised for some excellent scenes, the characters when they think
or act appear “platitudinous or intellectually shallow”. Karl’s conclusion
is that Kingsley, despite his compassion for the poor, “has not worn well,
but less for the old-fashioned nature of his narrative than for the intellectual
assumptions behind the novel” (336).
Alton Locke
; Social
and Political Views ; Religion
; Characterization
in Novels .
Keep, David J. “The Theology of Charles
Kingsley’s Village Sermons,” The Evangelical Quarterly Vol. LIII,
No. 4 (Oct-Dec 1981): 207-215.
Keep examines Kingsley’s sermons to the congregation at Eversley
during the relatively unstable social and political period 1849-1854, the
time Kingsley’s own radical views and writing were at their peak. He
declares that though these village sermons were clearly written and free
from theological jargon they were on the whole not very extremist nor exciting.
They were particularly limited “in their failure to deal with the profound
theological questions posed by unitarianism and the questions raised by higher
criticism” (214). However, they did reveal “an optimistic eschatology
that God was working through technological progress and that change should
be welcomed” (215).
Sermons ;
Preacher,
Kingsley as ; Eversley
; Religion
; Christian
Socialism .
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 .
Lackey, Lionel. “Kingsley’s Hypatia
: Foes Ever New,” The Victorian Newsletter No. 87 (Spring 1995): 1-4.
Lackey examines the theme and structure of Hypatia. The novel’s
pejorative depiction of many aspects of the early Church was met with much
disfavor by many religiously conservative critics. Though the novel’s
ostensible thesis, according to Lackey, is that the early Church despite
its faults was better than the atheism it replaced, the true thesis is that
this Church’s bigotry, persecution, and violence are far from real Christianity.
Lackey ends by suggesting that a consideration of Kingsley’s views may still
be relevant in today’s complex civilization; he “poses an alternative to
the poles of a destructive Christianity and a soulless intellectualism” (4).
Hypatia;
Religion
; Social
and Political Views .
Lankewish, Vincent A. “Love Among the Ruins:
The Catacombs, the Closet, and the Victorian ‘Early Christian’ Novel,” Victorian
Literature and Culture Vol. 28, No. 2 (Sept 2000): 239-273.
Lankewish considers the Newman-Kingsley debate in the context of Kingsley's
antipathy to what he perceived as Catholics' unnatural attitude toward sex,
especially the Tractarian and Catholic depiction of Christ as spouse, and
their embrace of celibacy which Kingsley frequently regarded as effeminacy.
Kingsley, declares Lankewish, believed that it was only through such relations
as marriage, parenthood, and family that God could be truly known. Lankewish
also discusses Newman's possible homosexuality and Kingsley's attitude to
it. He argues that a consideration of the sexual context of the Newman-Kingsley
dispute provides a useful background to the study of the Victorian Early
Christian novel. He contends, in particular, "that the Hypatia/Callista
conflict not only anticipated the theological debate that erupted between
Kingsley and Newman in 1864, but foreshadowed the gender and sexual tensions
inherent within that debate as well. Through the representation of
the spiritual marriages between Christians and Christ that Kingsley found
so deplorable, Early Christian novels by Wiseman, Newman, and Pater coopt
the genre and transform it into a charged site for the articulation of sexual
difference and, most specifically in Pater's case, of male-male desire" (252).
Newman
Controversy ; Hypatia ;
Sexuality
; Celibacy
; Religion
.
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
.
Manlove, Colin. “Charles Kingsley: The Water-Babies
,” in Christian Fantasy: From 1200 to the Present (Notre Dame, Indiana:
University of Notre Dame Press, 1992): 183-208.
Manlove provides a thorough analysis of the themes and structure of The
Water-Babies paying particular attention to the distinct Christian pattern
of the novel’s narrative. Throughout his treatment Manlove compares and contrasts
the work of Kingsley with that of George MacDonald.
The Water-Babies
; MacDonald,
George ; Religion
Manlove, Colin. “MacDonald and Kingsley:
A Victorian Contrast” in William Raeper (ed.) The Gold Thread: Essays
on George MacDonald (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1990): 140-162.
In this article Manlove compares and contrasts the characters, the views,
and the writings of Kingsley and George MacDonald, who, he declares were
arguably the only two significant writers of Christian fantasy in the Victorian
period. Generally, Kingsley, whose belief and involvement in science were
much greater than MacDonald's, places nature first while MacDonald chooses
"supernature." Kingsley's God is so identifiable with the works of
His creation that He is only distinguishable from them by faith. The
God of MacDonald, who has a stronger sense of the supernatural and the mystical,
is invariably a person, whereas for Kingsley He is a force. Nevertheless,
Manlove argues that the two writers for all their differences share a particular
common bond, namely "that they chose, alone and at almost the same time in
the nineteenth century, to put what they could of the divine presence in
the fairy tale" (159).
MacDonald,
George ; Religion
; Science
; The
Water-Babies .
Maynard, John. “Victorian Discourses on
Sexuality and Religion,” University of Hartford Studies in Literature
Vol. 19, Nos 2 & 3 (1987): 61-69.
For Kingsley, according to Maynard, religion and sexuality are thoroughly
intermingled. His dislike of Newman stemmed in large part from his strong
aversion to religious celibacy. However, all forms of sexual license
for Kingsley were anathema. The proper place for sexuality was within
marriage, with only one marriage in a lifetime. “Celibacy is religion
without sex; licentiousness, sex without religion. The via media for
Kingsley, married religious sexuality, allows one unified discourse: married
sexuality repairs the Fall and leads us from earth to heaven, which is only
more – and more intensely – of the same” (63). Kingsley also depicts
competing types of sexuality in certain of his writings. For example,
in Hypatia the struggle between the intellectual views of different
religious groups in 5th century Alexandria may be seen as just as much a
competition of opposite sexual styles. Similarly, Westward Ho!
may be understood from the standpoint of opposite sexual religious world
views as the conflict “between chaste, successful Protestants and lewd, unsuccessful
Spanish Catholics” (64).
Religion
; Sexuality
; Celibacy
; Hypatia
; Westward
Ho! .
Meadows, A. J. “Kingsley’s Attitude to
Science,” Theology Vol. LXXVIII, No. 655 (January 1975): 15-22.
Meadows declares that Kingsley was unlike many of his religious contemporaries
in his belief that science and even the theories of Darwin actually strengthened
the truths of Christianity. He also states that Kingsley viewed science as
a vehicle for improving society, for example the promotion of public health.
In addition, Meadows writes that Kingsley though an enthusiastic practitioner
of science was still an amateur in a field that was quickly becoming professional.
Science ;
Religion
; Darwin
; Health
.
Muller, Charles H. “Alton Locke:
Kingsley's Dramatic Sermon,” Unisa English Studies Vol. 14, Nos. 2-3
(1976): 9-20.
Though much of Alton Locke, according to Muller, reads as a political
tract and Alton himself is represented through most of the novel as a dangerous
agitator, a dramatic change occurs at the end with Alton renouncing his subversive
views and embracing religion as a solution. Kingsley seeing no distinction
between the secular and the religious, believed that such desiderata as sanitary
reform and social emancipation would come about through spiritual or religious
emancipation. Alton Locke may be viewed not primarily as a Chartist
novel but as an expression of Kingsley's Christian work on behalf of the
poorer classes. The novel "is really a Christian novel, written in
the spirit of his sermons which never failed to emphasize, on the one hand,
the Gospel message of the Kingdom of God, and, on the other, personal salvation
or reform" (9).
Alton Locke
; Chartism
; Religion
.
Muller, Charles H. “The Christian Didactics and
the Sermons of Charles Kingsley,” Communiqué Vol.
9, No. 1 (1984): 14-44.
In a lengthy article Muller declares that Kingsley the preacher was essentially
a teacher. He examines Kingsley’ style of preaching, his didactic methodology,
and his socio-theological didactics. He declares that Kingsley was
a forceful and emotional preacher, sometimes dynamic and dramatic, but frequently
lacking in incisive intellectual argumentation. When he expounded Scripture
and taught about God, whether he preached to the unsophisticated in Eversley
or to royals at the Chapel Royal or Windsor, he was invariably didactic.
He was consistent in his didactic material: “the statutes of a loving but
just God. God is often revealed as severe and terribly exacting.
But there are times when God is seen as the author of benevolence and mercy”
(33). Muller declares that the didactic purpose of Kingsley’s sermons
is primarily ethical-moral. “It teaches, essentially, that there can
be no change in the social order, no purposeful progress towards the perfect
realization of God’s kingdom on earth, without a spiritual revolution first
taking place within the heart and life of the individual. Freedom from
sin will mean a new spiritual democracy, when men have the strength to resist
sin and choose the right” (39).
Sermons ;
Preacher,
Kingsley as ; Didacticism
; Religion
.
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
.
Muller, Charles H. “Poetics and Providence
in Kingsley’s Two Years Ago,” UNISA English Studies Vol. 17,
No. 2 (1979): 29-39.
In this study of the respective roles of art and God in Two Years Ago
Muller contends strongly that it was "Kingsley's recognition of Providence's
role in his fiction which undermined the value of his art. It made
his art obtrusively didactic. . . . However, it was chiefly because of Kingsley's
belief in the poetic - or, rather, religious - licence of Christian art that
he considered himself free to obtrude his moral commentary" (38).
Two Years
Ago ; Art ; Religion
.
Muller, Charles H. “Spiritual Evolution
and Muscular Theology: Lessons from Kingsley’s Natural Theology,” University
of Cape Town Studies in English Vol. 15 (March 1986): 24-34.
Kingsley’s understanding of the relationship between science and religion
is quite straightforward according to Muller. The natural world for
Kingsley everywhere reveals the work of God; everything physical is but a
reflection of the Eternal Realities. The work of the scientist is essentially
a glorification of the Creator. “As a religious thinker, Kingsley was
deductive and intuitive in his logic; as a scientific thinker, he was inductive,
seeing the infinite in the finite, or maxima in minimis , as exemplified
by the wonders of creation in so lowly a creature as the spider-crab.
In seeing the divine mirrored in a pebble or spore, however, he was combining
a scientific and religious vision of life – uniting the function
of the microscope and the telescope, as it were” (31).
Science ;
Religion
; Nature
; Natural
theology ; Glaucus.
Muller, Charles H. Two Sermons of Charles
Kingsley (Pietersburg, South Africa: University of the North, 1979).
This is the text of two previously unpublished sermon manuscripts from the
Morris L. Parrish Collection, Princeton University Library. Muller,
the transcriber, notes Kingsley’s strong vein of compassion pervading the
sermons. The first, originally preached at Eversley in 1846, stresses that
God does not just belong to some far off eschatological future but that he
is at hand in people’s normal daily life. The second sermon, preached
in 1851 at a child’s funeral, also focuses on a comforting God’s presence
in everyday life. Muller discusses the influence of F.D. Maurice’s teachings
on Kingsley’s “understanding of the present relevance of divine Providence,
and of the Kingdom of God as a present and spreading reality” (3).
Carlyle was another important influence. Muller also discusses the
style and the composition of these two sermons. Though they were manifestly
quickly and carelessly written, probably very shortly before delivery, “Kingsley’s
spoken words, as recorded in the sermons, must have had an almost magical,
and very dramatic, effect on his congregation. In each case the emotional
climax shows how directly they came from the heart”(5).
Sermons ;
Eversley
; Religion
; Carlyle
; Maurice
.
Muller, Charles H. “The Water Babies
: Moral Lessons for Children.” UNISA English Studies Vol. 24, No. 1
(1986): 12-17.
Muller discusses the numerous biblical and moral lessons in The Water-Babies
and the work’s patent allegorical and didactic significance. However, he
stresses that the fable’s major aim is to assert God’s abiding love and the
ever presence of divine providence.
The Water-Babies
; Moral Lessons
; Children
; Religion
.
Noel, Conrad. Socialism in Church History
(Milwaukee: Young Churchman, 1911).
Noel discusses the “socialist” views and work of Kingsley and Maurice and
relates them to their religious beliefs. He denies that they were broad
Churchmen; rather “they protested against broad Churchism as being almost
as anti-Christian as Puseyism or popular Protestantism. Their lives
were devoted to the revival of the Catholic democratic Faith” (245).
Religion
; Christian
Socialism ; Maurice .
Paradis, James G.
“Satire and Science in Victorian Culture,” in Bernard Lightman (ed.) Victorian
Science in Context (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997): 143-175.
Paradis points out that though Kingsley was a
strong advocate of the scientific efforts of the likes of Lyell, Darwin, and
Huxley, he also eagerly sought a post-Darwinian equivalent to natural theology.
Kingsley considered that Victorian science was inadequate in itself as a
philosophy of life and caricatured its one-sided scientific naturalist approach
in The Water-Babies.
Science;
Religion
; Natural
Theology ; The Water-Babies
.
Parrish, Geoffrey. “Kingsley and a Victorian
View of Miracles,” Faith and Freedom Vol. 38, No. 114, Part 3 (Autumn
1985): 151-157.
Parrish examines Kingsley’s view of miracles as expressed in Alton Locke
. It is probable that it is Kingsley’s own view that Dean Winstay expresses,
namely that science and revealed religion, though separate, are complementary
sources of knowledge, each enjoying its own sphere of competence. Parrish
makes three points concerning Kingsley’s opinion on miracles. “There
must be a theistic interpretation of the universe, there must be a belief
in the Incarnation, and from these two there comes the conviction that if
Jesus is what Christians believe him to be, he can do what others cannot,
because he knows what the laws of nature really are” (156).
Miracles
; Alton
Locke ; Religion
; Science
.
Prickett, Stephen. “Adults in Allegory
Land: Kingsley and MacDonald,” in his Victorian Fantasy (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1979): 150-197.
Prickett provides a lengthy examination of The Water-Babies comparing
and contrasting it with several allegorical fantasies of George MacDonald.
Among other topics, he discusses the extent to which Kingsley was influenced
by Wordsworth regarding his view of nature and his attitude to childhood,
as well as by Rabelais. He also examines Platonism, religion, evolution,
and the nature of allegory in The Water-Babies . Prickett declares
that Kingsley and MacDonald have quite distinct mental sets. “Kingsley,
the botanist, marine biologist and historian is fascinated by every minute
detail of this world; ‘other’ worlds are constructs – telling us yet more
about this. MacDonald is a temperamental Platonist, only interested
in the surface of this world for the news it gives him of another, hidden
reality, perceived, as it were, through a glass darkly” (193).
The Water-Babies
; MacDonald,
George ; Rabelais
; Wordsworth
; Nature
; Children
; Religion
; Plato ;
Evolution
.
Prickett, Stephen. “Purging Christianity
of its Semitic Origins: Kingsley, Arnold and the Bible,” in Juliet John and
Alice Jenkins (eds.). Rethinking Victorian Culture (London: Macmillan,
2000): 63-79.
Prickett examines the role of pagan civilization and the Church in Hypatia
. Kingsley is favorable to neither. Rather, his theory of history
leads him to admire the Teutonic races who are civilization’s future.
The Catholicism of fourth-century Alexandria is as doomed as the pagan world
it supplanted. It is merely a proto-Christianity that is “saved only
by the presence within it of certain forward-looking characters who dimly
foreshadow, as it were, the coming age of Teutonic Protestantism a thousand
years in the future” (68-9).
Hypatia;
Religion
; Racial
Prejudices ; Anti-semitism
; Arnold,
Matthew .
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 .
Rauch, Alan. "The Tailor Transformed: Charles
Kingsley's Alton Locke" in his Useful Knowledge: The Victorians,
Morality, and 'The March of Intellect' (Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
2001): 164-189.
Rauch argues that Kingsley intended Alton Locke: Tailor and Poet ,
as its name suggests, to be a novel that harmonized quite disparate themes
and ideas. A staunch believer himself in the truths of religion and science
and their ultimate integration, he hoped that Alton Locke 's readers
would also accept their reconciliation and their worth when blended as a
pathway to absolute truth. However, Rauch considers that the novel failed
in this goal and that Kingsley's passionate attempt to reconcile religion
and science did not satisfy and did not convince. While Alton's own
"transformation" uses language taken from science and a purpose taken from
religion, neither are credible. "Because of its attempt to deal with all
controversies single-handedly, Alton Locke is , in fact, a polemic
and thus lacks the kind of intriguing suggestiveness that is so characteristic
of" novels by Jane Webb Loudon, Mary Shelley, and Charlotte Brontë that
succeed in linking "science with tradition without invoking religion itself"
(189).
Alton Locke
; Science ;
Religion
; Social
and Political Views ; Change,
Notion of .
Rauch, Alan. "The Tailor Transformed: Charles
Kingsley's Alton Locke and the Notion of Change," Studies in the
Novel Vol. 25, No. 2 (Summer 1993): 196-213.
Rauch considers Kingsley's belief that science and religion are compatible
and that the study of the former could only serve to support the teachings
of faith. Both are truth seeking activities. Kingsley also found
suggestive the parallels between transformations in the natural worlds and
transformations in the spiritual spheres. It is a parallel, declares Rauch,
that Kingsley adapted for the character of Alton in Alton Locke .
Kingsley is drawing on the progressive transformation of forms in the natural
world when he depicts the gradual change of Alton from an atheist and political
agitator to a Christian with a much moderated political reform agenda.
Science ;
Religion
; Change,
Notion of ; Darwin ;
Alton Locke
; Social
and Political Views .
Raven, Rev. Canon C. E. “Charles Kingsley,”
The Listener Vol. 11, No. 283 (13 June, 1934) 1007-1008.
Though holding that Alton Locke is clearly a work of propaganda, Raven
praises it for its scene painting, its descriptions of landscape, atmosphere,
sights, sounds and smells. He declares that the best work of Kingsley,
a passionate lover of nature, was as an interpreter of recent scientific
discoveries in terms of Christianity. “. . . he was almost the only
Churchman of his time to realise that science and the scientific method were
accomplishing a revolution in human thought, and that unless the Church recognised
this it would be unfit to commend its message to the world” (1008).
Alton Locke
; Science ;
Evolution
; Religion
.
Robertson, J. M. A History of Freethought
in the Nineteenth Century. 2 Vols. (New York: Putnam's Sons, 1930).
Vol. II, pp. 321-323.
Robertson very briefly discusses Kingsley’s understanding of the compatibility
of science and religion and his acceptance of the theory of evolution.
Science ;
Religion
; Evolution
.
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
.
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 .
Uffelman, Larry K., and P. G. Scott, “Kingsley's
Serial Novels: Yeast,” Victorian Periodicals Newsletter Vol.
IX, No. 4 (December 1976): 111-119.
Uffelman and Scott discuss the early publication history of Yeast which
first appeared anonymously in six monthly installments in Fraser’s Magazine
from July to December 1848 and which was later republished in volume format
in 1851. They pay particular attention to the revisions Kingsley made
in the volume text. In addition to tempering many phrases which might
have upset orthodox religious sensibilities, Kingsley also added much anti-Catholic
material in the 1851 book, especially in the sub-plot concerning Luke, the
Tractarian curate and Lancelot’s cousin. The other major revision involved
expanding the ‘discussion’ element in the last part of the novel where Lancelot
meets the prophet Barnakill. This tilts “the balance of the novel towards
the question of religious belief” (117). With respect to the diverse
revisions Uffelman and Scott declare that “The new and topical sub-plot devoted
to Luke’s conversion to Catholicism made the novel more abstract and theological,
as did also the expanded conversation with the prophet in the last chapter.
The minor revisions, however, suggest an interesting slight softening in
Kingsley’s attitudes to more orthodox religious earnestness, and show also
that Kingsley himself had become aware of some of the unevenness of plot
and tone which serial composition had encouraged in his first novel” (118-119).
Yeast;
Catholicism
; Religion
; Publication
.
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 .
Wheeler, Michael. The Old Enemies: Catholic
and Protestant in Nineteenth-Century English Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2006.
Wheeler’s book analyzes the cultural and religious conflicts and divisions
between Catholics and Protestants in Britain from the Reformation through
the nineteenth century. Wheeler is particularly interested in how writers
and other intellectuals interpreted the religious debates. He considers Kingsley’s
views, especially as revealed in Hypatia and Westward Ho! A
major focus of Hypatia is the vehement criticism of Catholic martyrology.
Wheeler contends that though Kingsley in his role of theologian and scientist
was a seeker of truth, as a novelist and historian in Hypatia he was
more intent on distorting ecclesiastical history to support what he considered
a higher truth, the truth of Protestantism as against the lies of Catholicism.
Religion;
Catholicism;
Hypatia;
The Water-Babies.
White, Paul. Thomas Huxley: Making the “Man
of Science” (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).
White discusses the long friendly relationship between Kingsley and Thomas
Huxley especially as manifested in their correspondence. He considers their
shared deep interest in science and evolutionary theory as well as their
quite opposing views on religion, particularly their attitudes to the existence
of the soul and to the persistence of life after death. Though attempting
over the years to reach a mutually respectful common ground on matters of
religion and science, great disparities continued to exist in their respective
fundamental beliefs. However, White argues that the great respect each had
for the other and their mutual openness to reasoned debate ensured that their
friendship would surmount their intellectual differences.
Huxley, T.H.
; Religion
; Science.
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