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61. Social Studies School Service Search Results List
Social studies School Service, August 6, 2005. How to Order About Our Guarantee IMPERIALISM AND PROGRESS The victorian era, 1860–1915
http://catalog.socialstudies.com/c/@doJXeISuNx5_o/Pages/search.html?&Record_Type

62. English Studies
The table below lists JStor titles related to English studies. A largecollection of writings by British women of the victorian era,
http://library.albany.edu/subject/english.html
English Studies

Last Updated: July 12, 2005 This page is maintained by Gerald Burke Associations
Modern Language Association (MLA)
MLA is a not-for-profit membership organization that promotes the study and teaching of language and literature. The homepage features membership information, employment opportunities in the field, convention information, and a listing of the various MLA publications.
National Endowment for the Humanities
The homepage for this federal agency features information about grant opportunites for history, philosophy, literature, and other humanities fields.
National Writers' Union
Website for the trade union for freelance writers of all genres publishing in U.S. markets.
Return to Top Composition
Writer's Resource Center
A website that offers access to essays about writing, well over 100 articles, a job center, a freelancer's center and the most recent addition, education about money.
Return to Top Cultural Studies
Border Crossings
A resource of sites relating to the various "borders" that demarcate the postmodern and postindustrial social imagination. Categories include Diaspora, La Frontera, Gender, Lesbigay, Cyborgs, Border Incidents, and Other Borders.

63. Victorian Era 1837-1901 Fashion History, Costume History And Social History. Dre
Fashion History and Costume History in the victorian era 18371901. make anyera of society special in relation to the study of the costume of a period.
http://www.fashion-era.com/the_victorian_era.htm
The Victorian Era
Fashion History
By Pauline Weston Thomas for Fashion-Era.com
Victorian Society
Social history. The transition from Romantic to Victorian society. Queen Victoria's accession. The emergence of new conditions and new social classes. The importance of the railway network on ordinary lives and improved communications. Please scroll down
Early Victorian Fashion 1837-1860
Early Victorian fashion history overview. The changing silhouette and dating costumes in a long era. Fashion innovations, the cage crinoline and coal tar aniline dyes. Charles Worth and Haute Couture's birth.
Mid-Late Victorian Fashion 1860-1901
Victorian fashion history. The fashion silhouettes of 1860-1880, 1867-1875, 1878-1901 from crinoline to various bustle forms. The 1890s and early power dressing. Click on the headings to go to full pages
Victorian Pictures of Victorian Mantelets and More Victorian Mantelets 1852 have been improved in the new section with line drawings and added text, but the original pages will remain here for a short time.

64. History Of Dance - Dance Videos & Dance Dvds Featuring 500 Years Of Social Dance
Vol V victorian era Couple Dances Vol VI A 19th Century Ball The Charm of Study the historical roots of our social dance traditions through couple
http://www.dancetimepublications.com/
HISTORY OF DANCE Dancetime! 500 Years on DVD Vol I: The 15th-19th Centuries Vol II: The 20th Century 2 Volumes: Dance History Set Dancetime! 500 Years on VHS Vol I: The 15th-19th Centuries Vol II: The 20th Century Archival Performances - DVDs Dancing the 20th Century A 19th Century Romance A Baroque Portfolio A Renaissance Revel Archival Performances - VHS Dancing the 20th Century A 19th Century Romance A Baroque Portfolio A Renaissance Revel DANCE INSTRUCTION How To Dance Through Time - DVDs Vol I: Mid 19th Century Couple Dances Vol II: The Ragtime Era Vol III: Renaissance Dance Vol IV: Baroque Social Dance Vol V: Victorian Era Couple Dances Vol VI: The Charm of Group Dances All 6 How To Dance Though Time DVDs How To Dance Through Time - VHS Vol I: Mid 19th Century Couple Dances Vol II: The Ragtime Era Vol III: Renaissance Dance Vol IV: Baroque Social Dance Vol V: Victorian Era Couple Dances Vol VI: The Charm of Group Dances How To Dance Through Time - CDs Vol's I/V: 19th Century Couple Dances Vol II: The Ragtime Era Vol III: Renaissance Dance Vol IV: Baroque Social Dance Vol VI: The Charm of Group Dances DANCE FILMS America Dances! 1897-1948(DVD)

65. 1833-1890: The Victorian Era.
18331890 The victorian era. The trend during this period will be you urgedus from the University pulpit to undertake the critical study of the Bible.
http://justus.anglican.org/resources/timeline/12victoria.html
The Victorian era
The trend during this period will be rediscovery of liturgy and church history ( "high church" ) and spreading Christianity ( "low church" emphasis). Serious problems dealing with industrial poverty and with new scientific understandings.
The Oxford Movement John Keble 's sermon "National Apostasy" is against a common-sense plan to reduce the number of Irish bishops. It begins the Oxford Movement. (Keble is already known for his book of poems, "The Christian Year", 1827). Edward Bouviere Pusey and John Henry Newman begin publishing "Tracts of the Times". (Hence the movements' other name, Tractarianism .) The Oxford Movement emphasizes the historic continuity of the church without opposing evangelicism and is regarded as strongly anti-liberal. James Lloyd Breck , priest, founds Nashotah House , with Anglo-Catholic emphasis. J. M. Neale founds the Ecclesiological Society, a club for college students interested in restoring and redesigning parish churches.
John Henry Newman falls victim to the Roman fever, later becomes a cardinal.

66. History In Focus: The Victorian Era (Introduction)
Introduction to victorian history resources. History in Focus. the guide tohistorical resources • Issue 1 The victorian era •
http://www.history.ac.uk/ihr/Focus/Victorians/
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History in Focus
the guide to historical resources

67. Victorian Era Book Review: Fertility, Class And Gender (author's Response)
the guide to historical resources • Issue 1 The victorian era • The studyof discourses typically produces stimulating insights, and almost always
http://www.history.ac.uk/ihr/Focus/Victorians/simon.html
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History in Focus
the guide to historical resources
  • other issues No javascript: other issues
    The Victorian Era
    Skip submenu introduction article websites ... family history
    Author's response
    Book:
    Fertility, Class and Gender in Britain 1860-1940
    Simon Szreter
    Cambridge University Press, 1996; pp. 704 Reviewer:
    Professor Michael Mason
    University College London Michael Mason is most certainly not one of these, as his own work in this difficult terrain, The Making of Victorian Sexuality and the The Making of Victorian Sexual Attitudes , clearly shows. He has refounded the historiography of the social history of Victorian sexualities on a far more extensive and systematic reading of the available plebeian source materials for the period 1815-1870 than any previous scholar attempted. To Mason's credit, his aim was the reconstruction of a fully social history of the emergence of 'Victorian' sexual codes. This was an exacting and ambitious intellectual goal, which required him to examine and sift a variety of categories of evidence, relating to behaviour as well as ideas; institutions as well as discourses. In his review Mason has summarised with lucidity many of the central arguments and themes I have worked to convey. In particular he has spent a lot of time carefully explaining some of the important nuances concerning the notion of 'perceived relative costs of childrearing' and the thesis of a 'culture of abstinence'. He has also offered an obvious departure point for a reply, by placing an interesting question-mark towards the end of the review. He focuses upon my attempt to adjudicate between the relative importance of cultural influences, as against the personal and immediate 'costs' faced by couples in accounting for reduced marital fertility. As Mason points out this interpretative issue arises from my attempt to consider explicitly the relationship between cultural precepts and agents' intentions, rather than simply assuming the priority of one or the other. Mason wonders, however, whether I am not fudging here. I hope not, so let me explain.

68. Victorian England Resources - Victorian Era Directories - Links - British Histor
victorian England (18371901) - Directory of Online Resources Victoria ResearchWeb dedicated to the scholarly study of the nineteenth century in
http://www.academicinfo.net/histukvictorian.html
Academic Info
Victorian England (1837-1901) - Directory of Online Resources

ct
Home Search Index ... Academic Info History Bookstore
A growing collection of titles most at 40 to 80% off list prices. Victorian England
BBC - History

" On this site you'll find in-depth articles, multimedia (like games, virtual tours and animations) as well as bite-size material like timelines and short biographies of historic figures. All is designed for you to get more out of your interest in History...The site is divided into a broad range of topics from Ancient History to Wars and Conflict. Within each topic you'll find sub-topics devoted to key areas such as Ancient Egypt or World War One. Much of the content is about British History, though we're now expanding into other areas."
  • History Trail
    "Articles, games, activities and quizzes that help you make sense of the past and the sources that made history. Pick a trail and start your journey."
    Sections include: Church and State ; Victorian Britain ; Family History ; Local History : Wars and Conflict ; Conquest ; How To Do History ; Archaeology.

69. The UnMuseum: Dinosaurs Of The Victorian Era
People marveled at the drawings made from their early study of dinosaur fossils . One early fan of dinosaurs was Queen Victoria s husband, Prince Albert.
http://www.unmuseum.org/vdinos.htm
Dinosaurs of the
A early drawing of a Megalosaurus Science and dinosaurs became acquainted around 1815 through a gentleman named William Buckland . Buckland had acquired some large fossil bones from Stonefield quarries near Oxford, England. Buckland recognized these bones as belonging to what appeared to be a lizard of enormous size. He named his find Megalosaurus which means "Great Lizard." According to his calculations, the animal must have exceeded forty feet in length and weighed as much as a large elephant. Though Buckland was not the first person to find a Megalosaurus bone (Robert Plot described one as far back as 1676) he was the first to realize that these fossils belonged to an unknown class of huge reptiles. In 1842 Richard Owen , of England, wrote an article reviewing the fossil evidence of these large reptiles. By then three species were well known: Megaloasurus, Iguanodon , and Hylaeosaurus . Owen noted that all three animals had similar structures in their vertebrae and decided that they should all belong to a new sub-order of the Saurian order. He coined the term of this sub-order Dinosauria , or "terrible lizards" and the name stuck.

70. VISAWUS_home
Its focus is victorian Rituals, Celebrations, and Anniversaries. His topicthis year will be What if the victorians Were Looking at us?
http://visawus.org/
Welcome to VISAWUS, an organization whose aim is to bring together all those with an interest in the Victorian era as defined by Britain and its empire from 1837 to 1901. VISAWUS sponsors annual conferences in various locations in the western United States. This year's conference will be held October 27-29, 2005 at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. Its focus is "Victorian Rituals, Celebrations, and Anniversaries." Papers will discuss such topics as the social significance of school prize days, the enduring significance of the Changing of the Guard, marriage and funeral customs, the initiation of national observances, and the growing phenomenon of commercial and community Dickens Christmas celebrations.
Click here for the 2005 Conference Program. We are pleased to announce that the 10th anniversary keynote speaker will be James Kincaid, Aerol Arnold Professor of English at the University of Southern California. Prof. Kincaid was the keynote speaker at the Association's first meeting; thus we, too, mark an important anniversary with a meaningful celebratory event. His topic this year will be "What if the Victorians Were Looking at Us?" The conference hotel will be the MCM Elegante, and sessions will be held on the UNM campus.

71. Victorian Era Mind Control - Zuerrnnovahh-Starr Livingstone
The victorian era was the time when the British Empire was at its largest. Relativity dismissed such approaches and has betrayed the study of science
http://educate-yourself.org/zsl/victoriaeramindcontrol08jan04.shtml
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Victorian Era Mind Control By Zuerrnnovahh-Starr Livingstone
http://educate-yourself.org/zsl/victoriaeramindcontrol08jan04.shtml
Jan. 8, 2004 The Victorian Era was the time when the British Empire was at its largest. The centuries old secret rule of the Sceptred Isles by the seven of the oldest shape shifters through royal bloodlines had brought the worldwide empire to its greatest extent. The first level of mind control was the British Class System. It was a rigid caste structure which prevented most from rising above the station of their birth families. Indoctrination started at an early age and was reinforced by the educational system, church, industry, government, justice system, military and by those who "Knew their place." The various castes kept one another in step with each other. Such was the ingraining of caste and identity that one's accent or inflection could peg where one was in the hierarchical system. The British caste system protected royalty and the monsters hidden in their ranks. The Indian caste system likewise protected the Brahmans and their alien bloodlines. Wherever caste systems appeared in the world there were criminals in the top ranks enforcing unjust rules. Rituals performed in the open regarding the pomp and pageantry of royalty and dark rites practised in private created a patriotic glamour around the royals inspite of all their wayward behaviour. The king's or queen's popularity has always been tightly controlled through black magic as well as stage managed events. Such is the dark grid of England that most people stay close to home or their zone of least discomfort. The British magnetic leylines have been abused to such an extent that it is physical work for psychically gifted people to cross them. It requires more conscious effort to travel twenty miles in England and other European countries than it does in the Americas or the Third World.

72. Dinosaur-Era Bird Could Fly, Brain Study Says
Dinosaurera Bird Could Fly, Brain Study Says. John Pickrell in England Since victorian times, it has been taken as one of the icons of evolution in
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/08/0804_040804_archaeopteryx.html
Site Index Subscribe Shop Search Top 15 Most Popular Stories NEWS SPECIAL SERIES RESOURCES Front Page Dinosaur-Era Bird Could Fly, Brain Study Says John Pickrell in England
for National Geographic News
August 4, 2004 The earliest known bird was discovered in a Bavarian quarry in 1861. Ever since, scientists have disagreed as to whether Archaeopteryx was fully capable of flight. Exquisitely preserved fossils reveal that the winged, feathered animal had numerous modern birdlike features, but much of its primitive reptilian skeleton betrays a close kinship to meat-eating dinosaurs. Now a study into the shape of Archaeopteryx' The analysis, which will be detailed tomorrow in the science journal Nature, provides some of the best evidence yet that Archaeopteryx spent much of its time on the wing. "If you fly, you need a very sophisticated coordination-and-control command center," said study co-author Angela Milner of London's Natural History Museum. "We can now show that the brain and sensory systems of Archaeopteryx were fully equipped for flight."

73. The Victorian Era
The victorian era is generally agreed to stretch through the reign of Queen Victoria culture, science, and ideas, it is imperative to study this era.
http://www.victoriaspast.com/FrontPorch/victorianera.htm
The Victorian Era
The Victorian Era (1837 - 1901)
by Ilana Miller The Victorian era is generally agreed to stretch through the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901). It was a tremendously exciting period when many artistic styles, literary schools, as well as, social, political and religious movements flourished. It was a time of prosperity, broad imperial expansion, and great political reform. It was also a time, which today we associate with "prudishness" and "repression". Without a doubt, it was an extraordinarily complex age, that has sometimes been called the Second English Renaissance. It is, however, also the beginning of Modern Times. The social classes of England were newly reforming, and fomenting. There was a churning upheaval of the old hierarchical order, and the middle classes were steadily growing. Added to that, the upper classes' composition was changing from simply hereditary aristocracy to a combination of nobility and an emerging wealthy commercial class. The definition of what made someone a gentleman or a lady was, therefore, changing at what some thought was an alarming rate. By the end of the century, it was silently agreed that a gentleman was someone who had a liberal public (private) school education (preferably at Eton, Rugby, or Harrow), no matter what his antecedents might be. There continued to be a large and generally disgruntled working class, wanting and slowly getting reform and change. Conditions of the working class were still bad, though, through the century, three reform bills gradually gave the vote to most males over the age of twenty-one. Contrasting to that was the horrible reality of child labor which persisted throughout the period. When a bill was passed stipulating that children under nine could not work in the textile industry, this in no way applied to other industries, nor did it in any way curb rampant teenaged prostitution.

74. Lady Geraldine's Courtship : Women In The Victorian Age
The degradation of the married woman in the victorian era existed not only in While most of the women studied were born before 1890, Berment’s study,
http://caxton.stockton.edu/browning/stories/storyReader$3
Lady Geraldine's Courtship Annotated Poem Part 2 of Annotated Poem Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Biography ... Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Style and Body of Work Women in the Victorian Age Robert Browning's Biography About Additional Texts
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Women in the Victorian Age
The Degradation of Married Women in the Victorian Era
The degradation of the married woman in the Victorian era existed not only in that she was stripped of all her legal rights but also that no obligations were placed in her realm. Upon marriage, Victorian brides relinquished all rights to property and personal wealth to their husbands. Women were, under the law, “legally incompetent and irresponsible.” A married woman was entitled to no legal recourse in any matter, unless it was sponsored and endorsed by her husband. Helpless in the eyes of civil authority, the married woman was in the same category with “criminals, lunatics, and minors” (Vicinus 7). Eighteenth-century, English jurist, William Blackstone curtly described her legal status, “in law a husband and wife are one person, and the husband is that person” (Jones 402).
The Victorian woman was her husband’s chattel. She was completely dependent upon him and subject to him. She had no right to sue for divorce or to the custody of her children should the couple separate. She could not make a will or keep her earnings. Her area of expertise, her

75. First Spiritual Temple: Victorian Evening With Spirit And Friends
The victorian era has not died; it is fully alive in that era’s last Join Usfor a victorian Evening ~. Over the years, we have maintained Spirit
http://www.fst.org/victeve.htm
A Victorian Evening
With Spirit and Friends An Experience Unlike Anything You Will Find
In the Greater Boston Area. Hosted By The First Spiritual Temple
16 Monmouth Street
Brookline, MA 02446-5605 ~ A Victorian Evening With Spirit and Friends ~
In 1885, during the Victorian period, you could walk down Newbury Street, in the Back Bay section of Boston, gently lit by the moon and the gas lights which adorned the street. Once you arrived at Exeter Street, you found yourself at the First Spiritual Temple. Upon entering the building, you were greeted by a brightly lit sanctuary, whose gas lit chandeliers shown brightly overhead. On the upper floor were classrooms, similarly lit, and, on the lower floor, were the Library and Study, where so many people came to experience the wonder and marvels of Spirit! Did you ever wonder what it might have felt like to spend an evening with friends and Spirit during that period of time? Well, we can’t go back 120 years and find ourselves in the old Temple building, nor can we bring back the old gas lights. But, we can recreate, today, the amazing wonder, mystery, and feeling of that Victorian era in the Library of the First Spiritual Temple, here, at 16 Monmouth Street, in Brookline! The Victorian era has not died; it is fully alive in that era’s last remaining bastion of Christian Spiritualism, the First Spiritual Temple, founded in 1883 by Marcellus Seth Ayer.

76. Victorian: Definition, Synonyms And Much More From Answers.com
The victorian era of Great Britain is considered the height of the British many victorian gentlemen devoted their time to the study of natural history.
http://www.answers.com/topic/victorian-era
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Arts Business Entertainment Games ... More... On this page: Dictionary Thesaurus History Literature WordNet Wikipedia Translations Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Victorian Dictionary Vic·to·ri·an vÄ­k-t´r ē-ən, -tōr
adj.
  • Of, relating to, or belonging to the period of the reign of Queen Victoria: a Victorian novel. Relating to or displaying the standards or ideals of morality regarded as characteristic of the time of Queen Victoria: Victorian manners. Being in the highly ornamented, massive style of architecture, decor, and furnishings popular in 19th-century England.
  • n. A person belonging to or exhibiting characteristics typical of the Victorian period.
    var tcdacmd="cc=art;dt"; Thesaurus Victorian adjective Marked by excessive concern for propriety and good form: bluenosed genteel old-maidish precise ... stuffy Idioms: prim and proper. See plain/fancy noun A person who is too much concerned with being proper, modest, or righteous: bluenose Mrs. Grundy prude puritan Informal old maid See sex/asexual
    History
    Victorian period The period of British history when Queen Victoria ruled; it includes the entire second half of the nineteenth century, a time when

    77. Gilded Age And Progressive Era
    Combined Arms Research Library (us Army Command and General Staff College, (League of Nations Photo Archive, Indiana University Center for Study of
    http://www2.tntech.edu/history/gilprog.html
    Gilded Age and Progressive Era Resources
    General Resources on the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
    Political Leaders
    Transformation of the West
    The Rise of Big Business and American Workers

    78. Oxford University Press: Strange And Secret Peoples: Carole G. Silver
    In her passionate, jargonfree prose Silver reminds us that literature always has This is an entertaining and informative study of victorian culture.
    http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/LiteratureEnglish/BritishLiteratur

    79. Oxford University Press: Victorian Feminists: Barbara Caine
    A study of victorian feminism, this book focuses on four leading feminists Emily She gives us vivid and perceptive portraits of four very different
    http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/HistoryWorld/British/19thC/?ci=019

    80. University Of Arizona Study Abroad And Student Exchange
    Australia s colonialization was many years later than the us, victorian erabuildings and statues are abundant in the central sections of major
    http://studyabroad.arizona.edu/
    Welcome! SASE offers opportunities for foreign study on a summer, semester, and yearly basis, while earning academic credit at home Universities. In addition to operating its own programs, SASE counsels students on study abroad programs available through other American universities, private companies, and foreign universities. We also offer an extensive library of literature and videotapes on specific programs. Our goals are to expand the range of academic options available to students, increase the number of students studying abroad, and assist in making foreign study financially possible.
    SASE News!
    Spring 2006 application : deadline: Oct. 14, 2005
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    deadline: Oct. 14, 2005
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    Photo and Essay Contest Winners

    International Exchange Students
    Applying to UA on Exchange Click Here

    Destinations 2006 Highlight: Australia
    The Land Down Under evokes enchanting images of kangaroos, koalas and boomerangs. Even though the physical environment is very different, Australia has many similarities with the United States. Both countries were established as British colonies; both were initially populated by convicts and indentured servants; and both countries share a common language, legal and educational systems.
    Australia's colonialization was many years later than the U.S., so the cities are newer with a distinct British architectural flavor. Victorian era buildings and statues are abundant in the central sections of major Australian cities.

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