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Charles Kingsley

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Kingsley, Charles

 

Born June 12, 1819, in Holne, Devonshire; died Jan. 23, 1875, in Eversley, Hampshire. English writer and publicist.

In the spirit of “Christian socialism,” Kingsley came out against the revolutionary current in Chartism. His novel Alton Locke (1850) shows the transformation of an active Chartist agitator into a meek reformer. Kingsley’s historical novels (for example, Hypatia, published in 1852–53; Russian translation, 1893) are directed against religious fanaticism and glorify the superiority of the Anglican Church over Catholicism. His novel Hereward the Wake (1866) is devoted to the history of the popular uprising against William the Conqueror in 1070. Kingsley also wrote sermons and lectures, as well as a collection of verses (1872).

WORKS

The Life and Works, vols. 1–19. London, 1901–03.

REFERENCES

Istoriia angliiskoi literatury, vol. 2, fasc. 2. Moscow, 1955.
Baldwin, S. E. Charles Kingsley. New York, 1934.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
This required the vilification of Charles Kingsley who, despite his participation in the demolition of Buckle, became the exemplification of everything a professional historian was not.
Put by the Victorian writer and historian Charles Kingsley, "There are two freedoms; the false, where a man is free to do what he likes; the true, where man is free to do what he ought."
(7) Charles Kingsley, a member of the Fred Gray Association and mutual friend of both Gray and Whitman described Gray's most recent assignment in a March 21, 1863, letter to the poet, reporting, "Fred is ...
"Every duty which is bidden to wait returns with seven fresh duties at its back." Charles Kingsley (1819-1875) was an English priest of the Church of England, university professor, historian and novelist.
Chapter Two, "Racist Rantings, Travellers' Tales, and a Creole Counterblast," deals with the impact on the British West Indies of racist ideas and writings by men such as James Froude, Thomas Carlyle, and Charles Kingsley. The caustic responses of West Indians to such biased writings provide the foundation of Creole nationalism.
Berry on the reception of Darwin's theory by both biologists and theologians, and another by Amy Laura Hall on Charles Kingsley's response--are exceptions to the strongly theological flavor evident in topics such as intelligent design, ecology, providence, the Fall and sin, ethics, evil, and the status of natural theology.
To exemplify the important Victorian quality of manliness, the father as 'omniscient guide,' Sanders cites Charles Kingsley, Christian Socialist and writer who saw himself as an educator (he and Richard Lovell Edgeworth being known for their authoritarian, educational children's books).
He discusses a wide range of texts in production, ranging through early revivals of Addison's Cato and Byron's Sardanapalus and productions of Shakespeare's Roman plays, to Irving's staging of Tennyson's The Cup, Barrett's series of Classical plays including Claudian and The Sign of the Cross, and Tree's Hypatia (by Charles Kingsley), Herod and Nero.
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1819: Charles Kingsley, the English clergyman who wrote The Water Babies, was born in Holne, Devon.
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