designed for my past and present students, especially the part-timers. I post, not the solid course material appropriate to internal university websites, but those "Tit-Bits" of information which make studying Victorian literature and culture such fun.
I am developing the site so that it reflects the eclectic style of popular Victorian magazines, as well as drawing on their rich content. I am not attempting to publish a new issue every month. Instead there will be additions and alterations to existing pages, new pages added and, occasionally others withdrawn, according to their seasonal topicality, and the current emphasis of my work. Some of this material will be held in the new Archive pages, which will also contain notes on any items that have been withdrawn from the site. There is some emphasis on Victorian women's magazines and the work of Victorian women journalists.
In one respect I am unashamedly "un-Victorian" in sticking to sans-serif fonts which are easier on the eye on a screen.
CHANGES TO THIS HOME PAGE

You can get an overview of contents from the Menu Bar on the left-hand side of each page of this site, but please note that there are sub-pages to some Menu items. For example by clicking "Ladies' Page" you are taken to that page and the sub-menu then reveals buttons for other pages, currently covering Victorian advice on beautiful hair and cosmetics, and the new page on Victorian fashions.

Most pages in the main menu contain an introduction to the genre or topic as it features in Victorian magazines. See the Contents Page for further details.
CONTENTS PAGE - List of articles and topics on each page
FEATURES PAGES - Material of general interest
LADIES' PAGE - Fashion, Beauty, Home and Domestic concerns
LADIES' FEATURE PAGE - Variable - on any Ladies' Page topic
LITERATURE PAGE - Fiction, Poetry and Criticism
ADVERTISING PAGE- Victorian Advertisements
EDITOR'S MAILBAG - Readers' Correspondence & Contact Me
ARCHIVE PAGES - Access to "out-of-date" seasonal pages

Victorian fashion journalism - In addition to Sam and Isabella Beeton's pioneering work in bringing high fashion to the British middle classes on the Ladies' Page - Fashion
I have now included material on the treatment of fashion in the cheap weekly papers of the 1890s. The article on Rational Dress for sporting activities, which focuses on the increasing popularity of "knickerbockers", has now been completed.

There are also additions to the article on Victorian hairstyles and hair treatments, and that on Victorian Cosmetics.
More on Victorian fashion journalism, and additional material on the Features page on Journalism.

I plan to start a page on Summer Gardens.
Readers who came to my study day on Victorian Women's Magazines may remember the suggestion of a course on that topic. It hasn't been forgotten, and meanwhile the "Ladies' Page" reflects some of the issues we discussed, and currently features some topics such as Victorian beauty products and fashions- we had time to mention only briefly. The "Literature Page" also focuses at the moment on reviewing in women's magazines.
FOOTNOTES
A solecism on the web - but an academic prop - so I'll compromise by leaving out the numbers.
"Conducted by" was the term used by some Victorian magazines rather than "Edited by". In referring to correspondence, however, "Editor" was almost always preferred.
Tit-Bits was the title of a highly popular magazine run by Alfred Harmsworth (Lord Northcliffe).
"Victorian" for my purposes is used to refer to what some historians term "the long nineteenth century" approx 1790-1914. The majority of the content will fall strictly within the years of Queen Victoria's reign, but for certain topics those dates are too restrictive.
IMPORTANT NOTE ON IMAGES AND REFERENCES
IMAGES: This is a personal free website, not a subscription one, so if you know my slide lectures please don't expect the same high quality reproduction of images! The slides are produced professionally; and whilst I may occasionally use one here, my aims on Victorian Page are simply to offer additional material which adequately illustrates particular points in the articles, and to add a bit of Victorian decoration to break up the text. Should you, however, for any reason make use of an image from this site please follow the guidelines under the COPYRIGHT note below.
REFERENCES: Students working on essays or dissertations may be surprised to see that I haven't included detailed references to my primary sources. This is because of my concern about inadvertent plagiarism from websites which contain short quotations and extracts, as this one does. If you read an entire essay on line and find an appropriate quotation for yourself that is one thing; but, if detailed references are included in a collection of short extracts it is all too easy to "lift" a telling sentence or paragraph which cost the author much time and trouble to find, and pass it off as the result of your own library researches. So if you do happen upon something useful for your assignment here you should find a guideline to my source for you to follow up, or alternatively you may cite this website. See COPYRIGHT NOTE below.
COPYRIGHT
I do not knowingly publish on this site any material in copyright for which I have not obtained permission. Should I have done so inadvertently please inform me so that the material can be removed. See Editor's Mailbag for contact details.
Unless otherwise stated Barbara Onslow is the author of and holds the copyright of the articles published on this site. Readers are free to use material for personal and private, but not commercial, uses on the following conditions.
Use of it in typed, printout or written forms should be acknowledged by quoting the author, date accessed and website.
Use of it on a non-commercial website should give a link to this page.
Thank you for respecting the work of others.
CONTACT ME via this link
The design at the top of each page is taken from an engraving of the New Printing Press at the office of The Times newspaper c. 1860; the other caption-free images from a woman's magazine 1872.
© The contents of this website Barbara Onslow June 2007