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24 November 2014

Ideas of Childhood in Victorian Children's Fiction: Orphans, Outcasts and Rebels

Throughout the Victorian period, thousands of orphans and other unparented children existed on the fringes of society, where they were at once more pathetic and more of a threat to social stability than children in even the poorest of families. 
Such figures often feature in children's literature, for propagandistic or less stridently didactic purposes. These solitary pilgrims or wayward souls were useful in the development of individual narratives, and also contributed to the development of the genre as a whole.

http://www.victorianweb.org/genre/childlit/childhood4.html