Abstract

George Robert Gissing’s In the Year of Jubilee (1894) brings together complex, contradictory and ultimately subversive views of late Victorian society, where social mobility and class, property, women’s rights, marriage, education, commerce, and advertising are problematized. Further, with the dramatic rate of social, economic, and political change that resulted from the Industrial Revolution, new banking and sources of capital, old ways of being and thinking simply cannot keep pace, resulting in the emergence of apocalyptic narratives on many fronts. Needless to say, the idea of "jubilee" is more or less antithetical to the idea of apocalypse, but ironically, Gissing's work is more informed by apocalypse and apocalyptic narratives than "jubilee" whether the concept of jubilee refers to liberation or an affirmation of monarchal reign. Gissing's "jubilee" juxtaposes self-congratulatory rhetoric (Victorian senses of self-actualization) with an underlying nihilism, particularly for women and those of lower classes. The fact that some of the women are able to break free and reinvent their worlds by means of education and a reinvented sense of self further reinforces the notion of apocalypse, particularly in the destruction of the “known” world and the emergence of a new one, essentially a “new heaven and earth.” The goal of this analysis is to conduct an analysis of Gissing’s In the Year of Jubilee and to demonstrate how the core narratives in the text contain elements of the apocalyptic narrative. In doing so, one object is to gain an understanding of how Gissing uses the abject jubilee (or apocalyptic) narrative in order to explore the social relationships and psychological states of the characters, and to use them to make certain observations and commentaries on the state of English society, the impact of industrialization, new technologies and urban sprawl, and the realities of social class and mobility (or lack of upward mobility) in late Victorian England.

Highlights

  • George Robert Gissing’s In the Year of Jubilee (1894) brings together complex, contradictory and subversive views of late Victorian society, where social mobility and class, property, women’s rights, marriage, education, commerce, and advertising are problematized

  • Gissing‘s late Victorian backdrop is more complicated than the earlier times, and tremendous economic growth along technological innovation has occurred

  • Jubilee refers to the part of the Jewish law detailed in Leviticus 25:10: “And ye shall hallow the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof: it shall be a jubilee unto you; and ye shall return every man unto his possession, and ye shall return every man unto his family.” (King James Bible ―Authorized Version,‖ Cambridge Edition) the novel is populated with a number of characters, whose lives and trajectories intersect in ways that seem almost driven by the impulse of the Victorian age, the individuals live in deep isolation

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Summary

ABOUT “JUBILEE”

The novel begins in 1887, the year of the Golden Jubilee, which marked Queen Victoria‘s continuous reign for 50 years. “And ye shall hallow the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof: it shall be a jubilee unto you; and ye shall return every man unto his possession, and ye shall return every man unto his family.” (King James Bible ―Authorized Version,‖ Cambridge Edition) the novel is populated with a number of characters, whose lives and trajectories intersect in ways that seem almost driven by the impulse of the Victorian age, the individuals live in deep isolation Their experiences are illustrated in the beginning chapters of the book, when Nancy decides to visit the Jubilee, and where she and Luckworth Crewe are caught up in a great throng. The most immediate impact was to pave the way for social mobility

SOCIAL MOBILITY
MARRIAGE AND MISALLIANCE
SELF-DESTRUCTION AND SOCIAL CHANGE: A CRITIQUE OF SOCIAL MOBILITY?
VICTORIAN APOCALYPSES
WOMEN AND EDUCATION IN IN THE YEAR OF JUBILEE
VICTORIAN GENRES
JUBILEE NARRATIVE
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