Role of the Victorian Society in the French lieutenant's woman by John Fowles
In this novel, Fowles is interested in the genre of the nineteenth-century romantic or gothic novel and
successfully recreates typical characters, situations and even dialogue. Yet his perspective is that of the
twentieth century as can be noted in the authorial intrusions and opening quotations drawn from the works of
Victorian writers whose observations were uniquely different from the assumptions that most Victorians held
about their world. In this way, he attempts to critique those
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to societal pressure to
conform to a particular behavior. His characters often act and react to how they are supposed to be behaving
rather than to any individual agency. Fowles is also interested in twentieth century novel conventions and the
Victorian romantic novel conditions and their treatment of realism. The Victorians were trying to write in a
realistic manner whereas their modern counterparts were attempting to clearly define the meaning of realism
through their writings.
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