Baldwin, Stanley E. Charles
Kingsley (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1934).
This is a book length treatment of Kingsley's life and works. After
chapters providing a brief biography, a discussion of the background of the
novels, and a consideration of the influence of Carlyle and Maurice, Baldwin
devotes separate chapters to each of the novels: Yeast, Alton Locke, Two
Years Ago, Hypatia, Westward Ho!, and Hereward the Wake .
Baldwin is measured in his assessment, though he still finds much to praise
in Kingsley's diverse literary endeavors. Nevertheless, he considers Kingsley
the man as more prominent than his literature. "Some men's writings
are the greatest part of them, and posterity studies their lives through
a spirit of curiosity excited by their works. In a sense this is true
of Kingsley, but in a truer sense many are reading Kingsley's literary works
because of the indelible impression his personality made upon his fellow
men, for whom, in all his activities, he labored. His life in itself
was a poem of deep lyric passion" (194).
Full Book Treatment
; Overview
; Carlyle
; Maurice
; Yeast
; Alton Locke
; Two Years
Ago ; Hypatia
; Westward
Ho! ; Hereward
the Wake .
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 .
Chitty, Susan. Charles Kingsley’s Landscape
(Newton Abbot; North Pomfret, Vt.: David and Charles, 1976).
The first part of this work is essentially a biography of Kingsley with particular
focus on the places he lived and visited, especially those in Devon. Most
of the second part is an examination of the places, again mainly in Devon,
mentioned in his works, particularly Westward Ho!, Two Years Ago
, and The Water-Babies.
Overview
; Devon ; Westward
Ho! ; Two Years Ago ; The Water-Babies .
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.
Christensen, Allan C. “Sick Mothers and Daughters: Symptoms of Cultural
Disorder in Novels by Manzoni, Dickens, Kingsley, Bulwer-Lytton, James,”
RSV: Rivista di Studi Vittoriani Vol. 7, No. 4 (January 1999):
5-32.
Christensen discusses the relationship of mother and daughter in Two Years
Ago in the context of society's "sick cultural system" (6).
“The passionate reunification of mother and daughter thus comes to typify
not only the event that will restore health to a particular plague-stricken
culture but also the redemption of the human race” (26).
Two Years
Ago ; Mothers and
Daughters ; Females ; Social
and Political Views .
Devonshire, M. G. The English Novel
in France: 1830-1870 (New York: Octagon Books, 1967).
Devonshire discusses the reception of Alton Locke, Yeast, Westward Ho!,
and Two Years Ago in France during the third quarter of the nineteenth
century and provides short extracts from some of the reviews. The French,
declares Devonshire, did indeed praise Kingsley for the literary value of
the novels, though they objected to the excessive sermonizing. However,
the main interest of the French lay in the novels’ social, political, and
historical background and their attitude to reform rather than in the actual
stories.
France, Critical
Reception in ; Alton Locke
; Yeast ;
Westward
Ho! ; Two Years
Ago .
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
.
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
.
Gillespie, Jr., Harold R. “George Eliot’s
Tertius Lydgate and Charles Kingsley’s Tom Thurnall,” Notes and Queries
Vol XI (n.s.) (June 1964): 226-227.
Gillespie points out that Middlemarch's Tertius Lydgate who is sometimes
regarded as fiction's first hero as physician, in fact was predated fourteen
years earlier by Two Years Ago's Tom Thurnall.
Two Years
Ago ; Eliot, George
.
Goldberg, F. S. “Kingsley and the Social
Problems of His Day,” The Westminster Review Vol. 167 (Jan. 1907):
41-49.
Goldberg provides a rathernaïveaccount of Kingsley’s work on behalf of
the poor and working classes and considers his views on social problems as
expressed in his novels. Though Kingsley believed that all men are
equal in the eyes of God, he was not a socialist. Rather, while their
social conditions must be alleviated, it was right that the working classes
should be governed by the upper classes.
Social
and Political Views ; Yeast ; Two Years
Ago .
Harris, Styron. “The 'Muscular Novel':
Medium of a Victorian Ideal,” Tennessee Philological Bulletin Vol.
27 (1990): 6-13.
Harris discusses the notion of “muscular Christianity”. It is epitomized
in three dominant figures of the novels: Amyas Leigh in Westward Ho!
, Tom Thurnall in Two Years Ago, and Hereward in Hereward the Wake
. Harris also discusses Kingsley’s influence on Thomas Hughes and on
Hughes’s portrayal of muscular Christianity in his novels Tom Brown’s
Schooldays, The Scouring of White Horse, and Tom Brown at Oxford
. Both novelists took care to distinguish the muscular Christian from
one who is mere muscle and both abhorred the hero of George Alfred Lawrence’s
novel Guy Livingstone who personified “muscularity without Christianity
or moral considerations”. Nevertheless, Harris agrees with David Newsome
that despite their broader meaning of muscular Christianity, “the muscular
novel according to Kingsley and Hughes contributed to the immense vogue of
athletics from the late sixties onwards” (11).
Muscular
Christianity ; Hughes,
Thomas ; Westward
Ho! ; Two Years
Ago ; Hereward
the Wake .
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 .
Horsman, Alan. “Elizabeth Gaskell and the
Kingsleys,” in his The Victorian Novel (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990):
256-294.
In his brief examination of Yeast, Alton Locke, Two Years Ago, and
The Water-Babies Horsman praises the clarity, the felicity and
the exactitude of Kingsley's descriptive passages, qualities that make him
"stand out among the minor novelists" (256). However, he also faults
Kingsley for neglecting his novel writing in favor of the pursuit of his
religious and educational aims that led him to take "the short cuts of melodrama
and allegory" (256). Horsman also criticizes the didacticism pervading
Kingsley's novels though he acknowledges that despite its strong didactic
elements The Water-Babies comes closest to a work of the imagination.
Yeast
; Alton
Locke ; Two
Years Ago ; The
Water-Babies ; Novels
; Didacticism
.
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 obstrusively 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
.
Newby, Richard L. “Wilkie Collins's Man
and Wife: Kingsley's Athlete Scouted,” McNeese Review Vol. 26
(1979-80): 47-54.
Newby discusses Wilkie Collins's castigation in his 1869-70 Man and Wife
of Kingsley's vaunted athleticism. He provides numerous reasons for Collins's
dislike of Kingsley, ranging from the latter's status as a most respectable
Establishment figure to Kingsley's denigration of the importance of the intellect.
Collins viewed this anti-intellectualism as being closely connected to Kingsley's
athleticism especially as advocated in the three novels Hereward the Wake,
Two Years Ago, and Westward Ho!. Man and Wife's propagandizing
against athleticism is Collins's retaliation.
Collins,
Wilkie ; Athleticism
; Hereward
the Wake , Two Years
Ago ; Westward
Ho!
Scott, Patrick. "Charles Kingsley," in
Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 21. Victorian
Novelists Before 1885. Edited by Ira B. Nadel and William E. Fredeman
(Detroit: Gale, 1983): 195-207.
This follows the usual format of the DLB. A bibliography of
Kingsley’s own works is followed by an account of his life interspersed with
an analysis of his major writings, in this case his novels. A short
secondary bibliography is appended. Several illustrations are also
provided. Scott sums up Kingsley the novelist as follows: ‘If Kingsley
never wrote a great work or an unflawed masterpiece, he can now, in light
of the new biographical evidence, be recognized as a writer of considerable
psychological complexity, one who produced searching and imaginative responses
to some of the central issues of the late 1840s” (206).
Overview
; Novels
; Alton
Locke ; Yeast
; Westward
Ho! ; Two Years
Ago ; Hypatia
; Hereward
the Wake .
Smith, Sheila, and Peter Denman. “Mid-Victorian
Novelists,” in Arthur Pollard (ed.) The Victorians (New York: Peter
Bedrick, 1987, c. 1970): 239-285.
Smith and Denman survey Kingsley’s novels. Yeast and Alton
Locke are his best. Yeast was the first novel devoted to
the notion that unsanitary conditions and disease existed in the countryside
as well as in the towns and cities. A “courageous” novel, it also provided
some indication “of the sexual squalor of the poor” (254, 253). Though
radical views are expressed in the novel, Smith and Denman declare that Kingsley
did not believe in democracy. “In his novels, as in Disraeli’s, the
independence of the lower orders must be achieved within the existing class-structure”
(255). Though Alton Locke has powerful scenes, its propaganda
takes precedence over the novel and its characters. Though Two Years Ago
has some good scenes, it is a “long-winded novel” (260). Smith and
Denman have little positive to say of Hypatia and Westward Ho!
, but state that The Water-Babies is Kingsley’s “most attractive book”
(260). “Charles Kingsley is a minor novelist, but in Yeast, Alton
Locke and Two Years Ago he helped to extend the novel’s subject
matter, and to make it more serious, more concerned with reality. He
saw God, Heaven and Hell in human terms. This was an asset to him as
a novelist, and gave substance to his novels” (261).
Novels ;
Yeast
; Alton
Locke ; Two Years
Ago ; Hypatia
; Westward
Ho! ; Social
and Political Views .
Swenson, Kristine. Medical Women and Victorian Fiction.
Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2005.
In this work Swenson examines the complex cultural intersections between
women and medicine in Victorian fiction and wider society. She considers the
roles of Grace Harvey and Valencia St. Just, two Eng-ish Crimean War nurses,
in the novel Two Years Ago. Kingsley stresses that the nurse’s role
is as much moral as medical. Moreover, despite the wartime bravery displayed
by his nurses, Kingsley insists that they must ultimately bend to the conventionality
of the Victorian marriage. Though Grace was a medical and religious heroine
she must be redefined domestically as wife, the proper role of a Victorian
woman. Swenson also highlights Kingsley’s forceful social criticism in Two
Years Ago where he lays the blame for pervasive disease and unsanitary
problems across all classes.
Two Years Ago; Sanitation;
Nurses;
Crimean War.
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 .
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