From Century Readings in English Literature, (which completely ignored Wilde, btw):
The term Victorian was often used in the first quarter of the twentieth century as an adjective of depreciation to signify anything out of fashion and therefore to be despised. As a matter of fact, the period is characterized by a steady and rapid growth on fundamental questions of politics, economics, natural science, ethics, and religious belief. Its weakest points were prudery as to matters of sex and intolerance of points of view diverging from the established conventions. At the beginning of the period the power of Mrs. Grundy, resting upon middle class prejudice, and supported by the all-pervading influence of the squire and the parson, was supreme, and writers like Thackeray groaned over the conventional and sometimes hypocritical restrictions by which their artistic freedom was curtailed; but at the end of the period, with the admission of women to higher education and the learned professions, even more perhaps their use of the bicycle and the tennis racket, conventional restriction had already started on its way to the growing laxity of the twentieth century.
Hey! Why not take a look at Superman in Action Comics
From Abbeville Press, this pocket book is nothing more than the covers from the first twenty-five years of Action Comics. Can you blame Lois Lane for being jealous when the Man of Steel teams up with the Worlds Most Perfect Woman?. My favorite is The Stolen S-Shirts: if t-shirts are cool, I guess s-shirts are even cooler?The covers go up through Action #300, in May of 1963. All except for the first few in 1938 feature Superman. The introduction is by Mark Waid and describes a short history of the selling of Superman, and the various artists in the life of Superman in Action.
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Search for more books by Mark Waid!See more like this at Cerebus the Gopher