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Charles Dickens (1812-1870)
Life
· &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Family he was the son on a naval clerk, at 1st they had the money to send Charles to school, but after they had a bankrupt and Charles was obliged to leave school and to work.
· &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Occupations he was a worker in a blacking factory (were he was fascinated by orphans) when he was young, then after the school Dickens became a clerk in a lawyer's office, a journalist and a lecturer.
· &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp;
Education he studied in a school in
· &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Prison He was put in prison where he had known the condition of the prisoners and he fascinated by these persons.
· &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Love In 1836 he married Catherine Hogarth but the marriage wasn't happy and they separated in 1856. He fell in love with a girl of 18 years old Ellen Ternan and this relationship caused to Dickens a sort of depression because he was influenced by the Victorian moral principles. Charles probably fall in love with his sister in law whom he described in some of his work.
· &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp;
Travels He went to
Features and Themes
§ &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp;
Realism Dickens included in his works a lot of details
especially when he described
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Dostoevsky: There were criminals in his books and their most frequent crime were a murder or a rape.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Dickens: There are criminals in his books, but the crimes they committed were only murders, in fact rape was connected with sex and was avoided.
§ &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Dualism Dickens created "specular characters" i.e. 2 characters symbolizing respectively good and evil. He at 1st used only flat characters, from 1850 he began to use round ones. Each characters of Dickens was drawn from the observation of real people and it was an individual (different from the other one). The author was not interest in the inner life of his character but in the external qualities.
§ &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; 2 Types of children
1. &nb 343i86d sp; Sentimental and
idealized children: a product of the Romanticism, he is an uncorrupted
child, he is responsible of his parents or relatives, they think about death as
a kind of
2. &nb 343i86d sp; Realistic child: an accurate kind closer to Dickens's experiences (David Copperfield and Pip). They haven't comprehension of death at all, they get bored when they go to Church.
§ &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Humour It was used by Dickens especially when he described some aspects of the lower-classes. It was now gentle and subtle, now paradoxical and sarcastic.
§ &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Metaphorical style Dickens used a lot of metaphor:
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; "Dombey and sons" the locomotive symbolized commercial progress.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; "Little Dorrit" the debtors' prison symbolized the Victorian society.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp;
"Hard Times" the shaft into
which
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; "Bleak House" the fog symbolized the oppression of the Victorian Age.
§ &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Limitations:
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; The earlier plots lacked a real organic unity and were too full of unlikely events.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His main characters were often superficially portrayed.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His sentimentalism was often excessive.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His comic scenes were often exaggerated.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His sentimentalism was often excessive.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His comic scenes were often exaggerated.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His tragic scene were often too melodramatic.
§ &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Merits:
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His powerful imagination had created an inexhaustible number of incidents.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His characters cover a wide range of people and in particular the minor ones with
their foibles and eccentricies.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His plots could hold the reader's attention till the end.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His style was fluent and effective.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; His use of symbolism was striking.
Works
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; Stretches by Boz Journalistic Sketches that talked about episodes of everyday
Humorous Novels
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; The Pickwick Papers A series of adventures of a club of amateur sportsmen. It
was published serially. (1836/1837)
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; Martin Chuzzlewit Satire of American vulgarity, it was written after Dickens's 1st
visit in
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; Barnaby Rudge Set during the anti-Catholic riots in 1780. (1841)
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; A tale of Two Cities It was published in serial
form in
It is divided in 3 books:
Historical Novels
Book
1 The story opens in 1775 when
Dr. Manette, who was imprisoned in 1757 by order of
the Marquis of St. Evrémonde, is released and goes to
Book 2 Lucie and Dr. Manette had to testify in a trial against Charles Darney, an English speaking Frenchman who is the nephew of
the Marquis of St. Evrémonde. Thanks to their
testimony and to his resemblance to an English barrister, Sydney Carton, Darney is freed. He falls in love with Lucie (who was also
loved by Carton) and he married her in 1783. Meanwhile in
Book 3 Darney
goes to
Ř &nb 343i86d sp;
Sentimental Novels
A Christmas Carol A ghost story with a moral.
There are 2 interpretation: a tale for children and a critic on the social evil (bad condition of the
humble people and of the criminals).
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; David Copperfield autobiographic novel. The protagonist was the alter ego of Dickens.
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; Oliver Twist It was at 1st
published instalments in 1837-38 then in a single volume edition in 1838. The
novel is set in
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Targets: Dickens wanted to show the real life of the criminals (he didn't want to idealize them), to criticize the Poor Law and the Workhouses and to draw the attention of the middle class to the corrupt administration and to the inhumanity of certain law.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Themes: Pauperism, Criminality, opposition between Fat characters (men in the workhouses) who symbolized the richness and Slim characters (the children) who symbolized the misery and poverty.
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; The Old Curiosity Shop a story about the ill-treatment of children in the industrial age.
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; Bleak House Symbolic story against the abuses of the law.
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; Hard Time Talked about the bad condition of the industrial worker.
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; Little Dorrit It was a story of a girl and it denouncing the horrible condition of the prisoners.
Ř &nb 343i86d sp;
Social Novels
Great Expectations It
appeared in weekly instalment in 1860, then was
published in 3 volumes in 1861 and in a single volume edition in 1862. It talks
of Philip Pirrip (Pip) a boy who had great expectation to became
a gentleman (he is accused of snobbery). He is an orphan who lives in a village
with his sister (who tortures psychologically Pip because she doesn't want her
brother in her house) and her husband Joe Gargery (who is a Blacksmith). Pip
frequents the house of Miss Havisham who is leaved by her lover on their
wedding night so she has since that day stopped all the clocks in her house. In
this house Pip meets Estella who doesn't consider him because he works in Joe's
blacksmith shop and who represents the revenge of Miss Havisham to all the men
(she has to attracts the men and to leave them). Pip obtains a fortune by an
unknown benefactor to receive a gentleman's education. He goes to
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Autobiographical elements: There are the introduction of some experience of Dickens (the blacking factory is reproposed in the blacksmith shop) and it is narrates in 1st person.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Themes: apprenticed to life, fading away of hope and illusions and the sense of isolation and loneliness, solitude.
- &nb 343i86d sp; &nb 343i86d sp; Endings: Dickens created 2 ending
1. &nb 343i86d sp; Pip come back to his own village but he isn't re-united with Estella.
2. &nb 343i86d sp; Pip is re-united with Estella. The author chooses this ending because he has to satisfied the expectation of the time.
Ř &nb 343i86d sp; The Mystery of Edwin Drood a novel of mystery and sensation which was unfinished.
Novel of Formation (Bildungsroman) David Copperfield" and "Great Expectations". Story of the characters from the infancy to the adult age.
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