WOMEN CHARCATERS IN VICTORIAN LITERATURE
Parvana ALAKBAROVA
Qafqaz University
parvana.alakbarova91@yahoo.com
Theroleofwomen in literature has rather changedthroughtheyears,asatermoflife. Victorian literature refers to the
literary works that were written during the reign of Queen Victoria. The Victorian era lasted from 1837 to 1901, when
Queen Victoria reigned, although many historians believe that the Reform Act of 1832 signifies the inception of the
Victorian era. The Victorian era served as a transition between the Romantic period and the literature of the twentieth
century. The major Victorian writers are: Thomas Hardy, Charles Dickens, Charlotte Brontë, Emily Brontë, Anne Brontë,
George Eliot, William Makepeace Thackeray and so on.
Inthelate1800swomendidnotplayanimportantpartinsociety, because they had limited rights.Victorianwomendifferfrom
contemporarywomeninthattheyweregenerallylookeduponasanornamentalmemberofthehousehold.Their
dutieswerechieflytocook,clean,takingcareofchildrenand keeping the house in order. The only role of women was to get
married and look after the homely chores.
Compared to modern period, Victorian women didn’t have freedom to choose their life. Even the legal rights of
married women were similar to those of children. Education played a turning role for women’s in corporation in work
because of the male dominance.EducationwasconsiderablymorelimitedintheVictorianerabecauseonlymalechildrencould
gotoschoolandgoteducationindifferent subjectswhilefemalechildrenlearned how tocook and do household. Women were not
let attend intouniversities which were only for men. However, todayeverywoman has thepossibility toenter
theuniversityanddevelopherstudieslikemen.
Victorianliterature directs the issues of conflict among the classes as well as the burgeoning push for women's rights.
Nevertheless, the defining peculiarity of Victorian literature is a powerful focus on morality. Heroes of Victorian literature
are often the oppressed members of society, such as the poor. Victorian writers romanticized hard work and strong dignity.
Characters with good ethics were usually awarded, while characters who acted poorly received their just desserts in the end.
Victorian novels were often written with the intention of teaching a moral lesson to readers. Underthe moral rules, in
Victorian literature characters are often teeming with passion and seduced by evil forces. However the characters of
Victorian literature show restriction against their wild emotions, which was abandoned by the Romantic writers who came
before, celebrating wildness and uncontrollable emotions.
Strong,independent women characters existed in Victorian literature. Two notable examples of them are Jane Eyre
fromCharlotte Brontë’s “Jane Eyre”, Mrs. Ramsay from Virginia Woolf’s “To the Lighthouse”. These characters, like the
novels in which they exist, stand out from others in Victorian literature. They arenot unnatural, stereotypical characters, yet
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