1964
DOI: 10.2307/810590
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The Crisis of Belief in Modern Literature

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“…It is precisely such characterisation of this intriguing figure that hints at the answer since Gothic fiction, which emerges in the second half of the eighteenth century, is said to recover the anxieties of its historical time (Botting, 1996, p 1;Hurley, 2002, p 194;Punter and Byron, 2004, p 39;Senf, 2017, p 2). By the end of the Victorian era, a "crisis of belief" (Strandberg, 1964) emerges as a symptom of the loss of confidence "in England's national dominance or in the power of industrialism and science to create a better world" (Senf, 2017, p 2). This is a widespread feeling stemming from a context of increasing secularisation, urbanisation, industrialisation, demographic growth and agitation for workers ' and women's rights (Guy, 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is precisely such characterisation of this intriguing figure that hints at the answer since Gothic fiction, which emerges in the second half of the eighteenth century, is said to recover the anxieties of its historical time (Botting, 1996, p 1;Hurley, 2002, p 194;Punter and Byron, 2004, p 39;Senf, 2017, p 2). By the end of the Victorian era, a "crisis of belief" (Strandberg, 1964) emerges as a symptom of the loss of confidence "in England's national dominance or in the power of industrialism and science to create a better world" (Senf, 2017, p 2). This is a widespread feeling stemming from a context of increasing secularisation, urbanisation, industrialisation, demographic growth and agitation for workers ' and women's rights (Guy, 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%