With Britain having control of South Africa and the many trade opportunities that it provided, such as wine and military positioning they began working to expand outward for better trade and land. Many explorers 'discovered' more of the west coast of Africa as a way to avoid the thriving African and Arab slave trade occurring on the east coast. Even so, they relied heavily on slavers and slave labor as they interacted with the Zanzibar people.
UVU Victorian Literature and Politics for the Present (Fall 2020) Dashboard
Description
The Victorian period was one of great change for Britain. Comprised of the years of Queen Victoria’s reign (1837-1901), it featured the rapid industrialization and urbanization of Britain, and the radical expansion of the British empire. Although these changes improved the quality of life for some Victorians, many more were forced to work under inhumane conditions, live in unsanitary and insalubrious environments, or suffered the violent oppressions of colonial rule. While we may think of the Victorian period as a distant, different era, this class argues that Victorians faced some of the same issues we deal with today, including systemic racism, opioid addiction, ecological disasters, and public health crises, to name but a few.
“Victorian Literature and Politics for the Present” revisits texts both familiar and new - canonical and not - through the lens of current events. Addressing a range of genres, this course examines historical and philosophical trends that shaped the era’s literature and were shaped by it. Specifically, it will explore how the Victorians addressed, and sometimes avoided, issues of racial oppression, class conflict, public welfare, and imperial plunder. Moreover, it will consider what parallels and throughlines we can draw between the Victorian era and the twenty-first century and contemplate the value of continuing to study Victorian authors and texts today.
Galleries, Timelines, and Maps
Individual Entries
Karl Marx first lived in Soho when he arrived to London from Germany around 1849. He later Moved to Maitland Park Road in the bourough of Camden in London in 1837. He remained living their until he died in 1883
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Karl-Marx/Early-years-in-London