By the end of this lecture, learners will be able to:

  1. Identify and describe key literary tropes, historical contexts, and thematic concerns in Gothic Romantic and Victorian literature, including the impact of the Industrial Revolution and shifting social norms. 

  2. Analyze the critique of Enlightenment rationality and scientific ambition in Frankenstein, alongside explorations of gender, class, and autonomy in the works of the Brontë sisters. 

  3. Examine the representation of selfhood, perseverance, and psychological depth in Victorian poetry, focusing on Tennyson’s and Browning’s responses to social change. 

  4. Compare the role of Gothic and dramatic monologue forms in conveying anxieties about power, morality, and instability in both Romantic and Victorian texts. 

  5. Critically engage with the subversion or reinforcement of gender and class hierarchies, particularly in the Brontës’ novels and Browning’s poetry. 

  6. Develop original arguments in written and oral form, synthesizing textual evidence to assess how literature reflects and critiques historical and cultural transformations. 


Last modified: Tuesday, 18 March 2025, 1:00 AM