Introduction; Part I. Public Scandals: 1. Opening Mazzini's mail: Sir James Graham and the Post Office; 2. The railway juggernaut: Delane, Dickens and the press; 3. Poor law bastille: the Andover workhouse scandal; Part II. Private Lives: 4. Love by post: Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning; 5. Letters from the Continent: Ruskin in Italy; 6. Letters of the living and the dead: Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle; Part III. Oxford Movements: 7. Established church in crisis: William George Ward and the Oxford Movement; 8. A dangerous correspondence: Newman on the road to Rome; Part IV. Irish Questions: 9. Educating papist priests: Gladstone and the Maynooth grant; 10. From our own Commissioner: Daniel O'Connell and The Times; 11. A prime minister resigns: Peel and the Corn Laws; Afterword.
Michael Wheeler is a leading authority on the Victorian age. His exploration of 1845 transforms our understanding of the period.
Michael Wheeler is a leading cultural and literary historian and presently a Visiting Professor of English Literature at the University of Southampton. His many critically acclaimed books include the prize-winning Death and the Future Life in Victorian Literature and Theology (1990), Ruskin's God (1999), The Old Enemies (2006) and St John and the Victorians (2011) – all published by Cambridge University Press – and, most recently, The Athenæum, published by Yale University Press in 2020.
'This lively account shows how a single year came to epitomise so
many of the overarching themes of the Victorian age. An inviting
read even for those already familiar with the episodes depicted,
this is a meticulous and thoroughly-researched tour de force of
scholarship by an author who always has new things to say.' Rohan
McWilliam, Professor of Modern British History, Anglia Ruskin
University
'Remarkably informative, interesting, well-researched, and
well-expressed, this study complements the many existing books on
Victorian life and culture with both well- known and little-known
material approached from a fresh point of view and supplemented in
places by the use of hitherto unpublished documents.' Rosemary
Ashton, Emeritus Quain Professor of English Language and
Literature, University College London
'Wheeler is a fine cultural historian, and anyone who picks up this
book will learn a great deal about the figures he has chosen …
(his) study is careful and consistently interesting.' Robert
Douglas-Fairhurst, The Spectator
'In this enthralling study, Wheeler argues that it was in 'the
crucible of 1845' that Victorian England came to define itself …
Reading Wheeler's chapter on … John Henry Newman - so well does he
tell the familiar story - it is as if we are hearing it for the
first time.' John Pridmore, Church Times
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