Acceptability of Victorian Harlets

 

 Image

 

After reading “The Harlot’s House” by Oscar Wilde  I came to the belief that he was writing from his own perspective on a particular night he had experienced. The author seems to have a spiteful look on the idea of Harlots and the Harlot House. I came to this conclusion because he talks badly about the women and uses unfriendly words to depict them. For example, he describes them as “slim silhouetted skeletons” which is not how you would describe someone you thought to be socially accepted. The Harlots are skinny and wear silhouettes to seem more appealing to men. Farther down the poem he describes one woman as a marionette outside smoking a cigarette like a living thing. This leads me to assume he is distasteful towards the Harlots. He repeatedly compares the Harlots with things that aren’t living or alive to make them seem like they aren’t people.

 

 Image

 

Another conclusion I drew after my first read through was that the lady he went there with was his wife or current lover. After the author described her leaving him to join the other girls I thought that maybe she deceived him and was secretly a Harlot as well. After further thinking about the words he used to describe the situation I alternatively thought that maybe he was actually just using the situation to describe how his ex-lover may have left him for another man or left him to become a Harlot. The author uses lines such as “love passed into the house of lust” to describe his situation of losing a lover to prostitution.

By Alex Holtman

Ruined at it’s best

Found Drowned by George Frederic Watts RA, is a painting that symbolizes women who are ruined during that period of time. The picture portrays a women who has seem to committed suicide. She is holding heart shaped locket and chain, suggesting that a tragedy having to do with love and heart break has occurred.

Women back then, were not treated as equals. They were known to be invisible. Maybe a there was secret love story behind this painting that did not end up well. You see these types of love stories in an everyday light. Maybe not to that extreme, but you never know what a person with a broken heart can do. Love is a ruined tragedy waiting to happen.

Suicides are definitely dark and ominous. Ruined people think dark twisted thoughts, thoughts we could never imagine. This ties into a love story ending in a tragedy and women getting the lower hand back in the Victorian era. Men held the upper hand and made the decisions for everything and for the women.

Tips for Everyone

Eddie Soloway is passionately excited about nature and shows it through photography. “I want to tell stories. Stories about art and making art. Stories of my own about the nature of experience and experiencing nature. Profound stories from other people with kernels of insight or inspiration. And of course, stories captured in an image.” Eddie Soloway.

Eddie’s passion evolved into writing, particularly essays which accompanied his photos. In 1995, Soloway fell in love with teaching during an education camp in college. This combination of love for teaching and artistic ability went bright things for Soloway’s future. In January of 1998, Soloway was honored as the first recipient by the Sante Fe Center for Visual Arts Excellence, when it awarded him with the Photographic Teaching Award.

Soloway has very insightful tips for anyone interested in nature photography. This set of tips can tie into our blog’s topic and also how others may perceive it. Some of the tips that work best in both situations are changing your perspective, working it, distracting backgrounds, and creative backgrounds.

When reading our blog you might change your perspective on the Victorian era and their politics; we intend to fulfill curiosities, and to explain things that most people have not heard about. Incorporating the ideas and suggestions of Soloway will mean focusing on on minute details, like the flower pedal in Soloway’s “Iris Dreams”. We will simply apply that idea to various aspects relating to the Victorian era. We will have to “work it” for our readers by starting with something small and then asking ourselves if there is anything bigger to say, which we hope there will be. We like the big picture. Distracting and creative backgrounds go hand in hand because we need to be creative but not to the point of distracting. We are excited about this topic but dont want to throw nonsense at our readers.

Image

(“The Bigger Picture”)

Peter Guttman is not only the recipient of the Gold Model Lowel Thomas Award for travel journalist of the year, twice, he is a photographer, author, television personality, and lecturer. with all that experience it is not a surprise that he has visited every continent on this beautiful plants and over two hundred countries.

To keep up with bragging he taught a popular travel photography class at the International Center of Photography and was chosen as a national spokesperson for Kodak. Not bad Mr. Guttman. He also has some travel photography tips that can tie in with our blog.

These tips include; that focus determines the exclamation point. It is easier to focus on the main points instead of the clutter. We should find the lighting that most dramatically points to your scene. We need to get the most interesting knowledge and facts to back up our topic. And utilizing scale helps generate greater meaning for the image, comparing and contrasting from the Victorian era to today and how different yet similar they really are.

Image

(“Scale”)