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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page review of the book “Queen Victoria” by Walter L. Arnstein. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAquearn.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Joan of Arc, and Jane Austen are the only other women who have had more written about them, it is only Queen Victoria who lived in a time where records
were kept and as such there is more information about her public and private life. As such she makes a fascinating topic, although overdone in the opinion of many. The
following paper offers a book review of Walter L. Arnsteins "Queen Victoria." Queen Victoria Arnstein starts his book off very well, and enticingly, by illustrating how people can
be disgruntled by yet another historical book on a famous figure. In this he encourages the reader to see what he has to say and to access whether it may
be different than what all the other historians have had to say about the infamous Queen Victoria. He states, "In order to justify the appearance of yet another life of
that monarch, this introductory chapter will first provide a brief overview of some of the major works about the queen that have appeared and how the utilization of newly available
manuscript sources and the reassessment of published materials have led to reinterpretations of her life" (Arnstein, 2003; 1). This presentation of how there has perhaps been too much written
on Queen Victoria allows the reader to judge for themselves if the book may be worthy of note from the beginning. And, what seems vital is the fact that in
this book the reader will be privy to much information regarding the queen that was not previously available to other historians who have written about her. This makes the work
valid and worthy of reading. Arnsteins work begins, after the introduction, with a look at the early years of Victoria who was essentially a very restricted girl. Her mother
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