Fear of the Future: Victorian Childhood's EvolutionMain MenuIntroductionChildhoodSection IntroductionMoralitySection IntroductionGender and Victorian ChildhoodSection IntroductionClass and Victorian ChildhoodSection IntroductionColonial Child and Victorian ChildhoodSection IntroductionTimelineBibliography, References, and Further ReadingsLaura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992c
An English Family in Macao by George Chinnery
12016-11-23T11:51:19-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992c614Colonial Sectionplain2016-12-16T14:30:37-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992cThis image, crafted in 1835, shows us a portrait of an English Family living in Macao. Done by George Chinnery, the image conveys the family as civilized, beautiful and refined even within the Orient. Down to the portrait in the background of the English estate, the image reflects a British ideal of living. But, being earlier, we see how the children are portrayed as prim and proper little adults. Little movement is allowed by their clothing or postures (certainly white doesn’t play well out of doors). The portrait seems to overemphasize the Englishness of the family in order to compensate for lack of English society.
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12016-11-23T11:47:11-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992cColonial Child and Victorian ChildhoodLaura Fitzpatrick9Section Introductionplain18382016-12-16T16:14:06-05:00Laura Fitzpatrick9f1bb1740dab097ebf17c64d01d58ab175a1992c