Victorian literature
Victorian literature comprises the works of fiction, poetry, drama, and nonfiction produced in Britain and its territories during the reign of Queen Victoria, from 1837 to 1901.[1][2] This era, coinciding with rapid industrialization, imperial expansion, and social upheaval, saw the novel emerge as the preeminent literary form, often serialized in periodicals to reach a growing literate middle class.[3][4] Key characteristics include a commitment to realism in depicting everyday life and social conditions, coupled with moral earnestness and didactic intent aimed at reform.[5] Authors frequently explored tensions between traditional values and modern challenges, such as poverty, class stratification, gender constraints, and the erosion of religious faith amid scientific progress like Darwin's theories.[6][7] Prominent figures encompass novelists Charles Dickens, whose works like Oliver Twist highlighted urban squalor; the Brontë sisters, with Charlotte's Jane Eyre probing personal autonomy and Emily's Wuthering Heights delving into passion and revenge; George Eliot's psychological depth in Middlemarch; poets Alfred Lord Tennyson and Robert Browning; and late-period writers like Thomas Hardy, who critiqued determinism and rural decline in Tess of the d'Urbervilles.[8][9] Achievements of Victorian literature lie in its influence on social awareness—prompting legislative changes on issues like child labor and education—and its formal innovations, including multi-plot narratives and character-driven realism that laid groundwork for modernism.[10] Defining traits also encompass subgenres like the sensation novel, which thrilled with crime and domestic intrigue, and Gothic revival elements, reflecting underlying anxieties about empire and morality despite the period's outward propriety.[11][5]