Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and Mores

There was a consensus at the time Eminent Victorians was published (1918) to welcome it as a groundbreaking study of Victorian character and mores. The book was as much the result of personal outrage on Strachey’s part as it was the result of the spirit of the times. But Strachey’s attitude towards...

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Main Author: Floriane Reviron-Piégay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2013-10-01
Series:Études Britanniques Contemporaines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/638
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spelling doaj-7d22c867769442128d17cf930d9d2e432020-11-24T23:05:15ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeÉtudes Britanniques Contemporaines1168-49172271-54442013-10-014510.4000/ebc.638Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and MoresFloriane Reviron-PiégayThere was a consensus at the time Eminent Victorians was published (1918) to welcome it as a groundbreaking study of Victorian character and mores. The book was as much the result of personal outrage on Strachey’s part as it was the result of the spirit of the times. But Strachey’s attitude towards the Victorians was perhaps not as straightforward and simple as it seemed. Indeed he was very much torn between outrage at their earnestness, hypocrisy and attitude to life in general and a kind of sympathetic deference for some of their representatives. This article explores this fertile paradox: far from condemning his biographees to the limbo of oblivion, his four biographical essays granted them eternal life and fame. Eminent Victorians launched a new biographical hero, between caricature, stereotypes and a surprisingly new psychological insight into the human psyche. This article also assesses to what extent his vision revolutionized not just the ethos of the times but also the genre of biography An experiment in style written from a slightly cynical point of view it ended up revolutionizing the art of biography thanks to its inspirational preface and to its rhetorics. A blend of satire, irony and iconoclasm, it is teeming with metaphors and hyperboles, which have become the hallmark of the author’s wit. Strachey was a man caught between his sympathies and dislikes, torn between classicism and romanticism, but in the end a forerunner of modernist theories and art and Eminent Victorians is an apt reminder that outrage is an essential component of art.http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/638VictorianismVictorian biographythe New Biographyiconoclasmoutragedecency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Floriane Reviron-Piégay
spellingShingle Floriane Reviron-Piégay
Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and Mores
Études Britanniques Contemporaines
Victorianism
Victorian biography
the New Biography
iconoclasm
outrage
decency
author_facet Floriane Reviron-Piégay
author_sort Floriane Reviron-Piégay
title Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and Mores
title_short Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and Mores
title_full Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and Mores
title_fullStr Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and Mores
title_full_unstemmed Eminent Victorians: Outrageous Strachey? The Indecent Exposure of Victorian Characters and Mores
title_sort eminent victorians: outrageous strachey? the indecent exposure of victorian characters and mores
publisher Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée
series Études Britanniques Contemporaines
issn 1168-4917
2271-5444
publishDate 2013-10-01
description There was a consensus at the time Eminent Victorians was published (1918) to welcome it as a groundbreaking study of Victorian character and mores. The book was as much the result of personal outrage on Strachey’s part as it was the result of the spirit of the times. But Strachey’s attitude towards the Victorians was perhaps not as straightforward and simple as it seemed. Indeed he was very much torn between outrage at their earnestness, hypocrisy and attitude to life in general and a kind of sympathetic deference for some of their representatives. This article explores this fertile paradox: far from condemning his biographees to the limbo of oblivion, his four biographical essays granted them eternal life and fame. Eminent Victorians launched a new biographical hero, between caricature, stereotypes and a surprisingly new psychological insight into the human psyche. This article also assesses to what extent his vision revolutionized not just the ethos of the times but also the genre of biography An experiment in style written from a slightly cynical point of view it ended up revolutionizing the art of biography thanks to its inspirational preface and to its rhetorics. A blend of satire, irony and iconoclasm, it is teeming with metaphors and hyperboles, which have become the hallmark of the author’s wit. Strachey was a man caught between his sympathies and dislikes, torn between classicism and romanticism, but in the end a forerunner of modernist theories and art and Eminent Victorians is an apt reminder that outrage is an essential component of art.
topic Victorianism
Victorian biography
the New Biography
iconoclasm
outrage
decency
url http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/638
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