Victorian Context: Christina Rosetti
Upbringing
- Very close-knit family
- Family = literary and religious
- All went into academia
- Youngest of four siblings
- Strong italien routes
- Father (Gabriel Rosetti) = political exile living in London
- Worked as a professor at King’s College
- Was obsessed with Dante
- Educated by her mother
- Religious education
- Still learns about ballads/fairytales
- Very flamboyant child until puberty → had a disease
- Became more reserved and quiet
Family
- MOTHER – Frances Polidori, Italian/English woman and a devout Christian (Anglican) who served as a shining example to kids
- UNCLE – John Polidori, Dr and writer (wrote the famous gothic story, Vampyre)
- OLDER SIS – Maria Polidori → nun (Anglican church)
- OLDER BROTHER – Dante Polidori → famous pre-raphaelite painter and poet
- Founder of pre-raphaelite brotherhood
- GRANDFATHER – cottage at Holmer Green inspired her attention to the minute in nature that marks her poetry
Religion
- Devout Anglican but followed some catholic teachings (Anglicans: disliked the pope)
- Religion shaped her life
- Teenager: had nervous breakdown ‘religious mania’
- She was so devout that she suffered in her daily life
- Rosetti and her sister = shared mother’s keen faith
- Wrote famous hymns and carols
- Religion bonded her and her mum
- Religious themes dominate her work
- Often tensions between earthly love and divine love
Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood
- Trying to show the realism of religion
- Group of English painters and poets (1848)
- Rejected the traditional conventions of art and literature of the time
- Inspired by romanticism → raw emotion
- William M. Rosetti’s four declarations
- Genuine ideas
- Study nature
- Have art as a purpose
- Produce good pieces of art
- Inspired by John Ration’s theories→ urged artists to ‘go to nature’
Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
- Was painted several times by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
- Gabriel wanted her to form the literary side of Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
→ she declined not wanting to be on display
- Her writing style is similar to Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
→ bright, detailed and shows religious devotion
Love
- Never married
- Engaged twice (at 18 and 36) 1) James Collinson, Charles Bagot Cayley
- Was romantically connected to three men – John Brett (NTYJ)
- Rejected suitors as he was a Roman Catholic → never compromised her faith
- Rejection of husbands = uncommon thing to do in the rigid patriarchal society she lived in
Women’s matters and rights
- Devoted 10 years of her life as a volunteer at St Mary Magdalene’s penitentiary for prostitutes and unmarried mothers
- Assisted the teaching of school children and involved with child protection campaigns
- But she still signed an anti-suffrage petition
- Some say she didn’t agree with equal rights
- Believed in the patriarchy of the church – she was so devout
- Made a remark that mothers would be great MPs, wanted more female representation in Parliament
- Conflicting views about whether she is a feminist or not
- She states ‘ the highest functions are not in this world open to both sexes’
Death and suffering
- Plagued by ill health in 1871 → Graves disease
- Progressively destroyed her health and looks
- Made her more reserved, fragile and depressed
- Outlived sister, brother, two suitors and mother
- Died of cancer in 1894
- Had seen great success in her life → work published in Britain and US
Politics
- Her work was more politically outspoken later
- Critical of slavery, imperialism, military aggression, committed to anti vivisection movement→ condone animal experimentation
- Also petitioned for legislation to protect children from prostitution and sexual exploitation by raising the age of consent
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