Context Istoric Mrs - Dalloway
Context Istoric Mrs - Dalloway
Context Istoric Mrs - Dalloway
Hystorical Content
The New Modern Era
The nineteenth century ushered in developments
that profoundly changed European society.
Mercantilism and industrialism created a powerful
new class. The cultural, political and economic
might of this new class, the bourgeoisie or middleclass,
soon overtook that of the aristocratic classes
that had controlled nations and empires before. The
spread of democracy and workers’ rights movements
also characterized the nineteenth century. It
was not until after World War I (1914–1918), however,
that a deep sense of how extremely and permanently
European society had changed prevailed.
Mrs. Dalloway registers this sense of the end
of an era. Clarissa’s Aunt Parry, the aged relic who
makes an appearance at Clarissa’s party, represents
this decline and this ending of an old way of life.
The old woman likes to remember her days in
Burma, a time and place suggestive of the height
of British imperialism and colonialism. But, as
Lady Bruton’s distressed comment about the situation
in India makes clear, the old days of paternalistic
European colonialism are over. India and
other colonies that used to be comfortable homes
for colonials like Clarissa’s aunt are now uncomfortable
places where the beginnings of serious battles
for independence are occurring.
Lady Bruton also mentions the Labour Party’s
ascendancy. (This new party gained a parliamentary
majority in England in 1924, the year before
Mrs. Dalloway was published.) This detail indicates
how the England of this time had become radically
modern in its move to a fuller social democracy,
the political system that still characterizes
most modern nations today, including the United
States. The Labour Party’s name indicates its representation
of rule by the people, for the people, as
opposed to rule by an aristocracy or an oligarchic
class.
Elizabeth Dalloway, a young woman considering
a career, is also an indicator of change, as entering
the working world was a social possibility
not available to women before this time.
WWI