Charles Dickens: Notes
- Born in Portsmouth in 1812
- Unhappy childhood: he had to work in a factory at the age of 12 (his father went to prison for debts)
- He became a newspaper reporter with the pen name Boz
- In 1836 Sketches by ‘Boz’, articles about London people and scenes, were published in installments
- The protagonists of his autobiographical novels, Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, Little Dorrit, became symbols of an exploited childhood
- Bleak House, Hard Times, Great Expectations set against the background of social issues
- Busy editor of magazines
- Died in 1870
- Dickens was the great novelist of cities, especially London
- Depicted the city’s society at three different social levels:
- The parochial world of the workhouses → its inhabitants belong to the lower-middle classes;
- the criminal world → murderers, pickpockets living in squalid slums;
- the Victorian middle class → respectable people believing in human dignity
- Detailed description of seven dials, a notorious slum district → its sense for disorientation and confinement is clearly expressed in Dickens’s novels
- Characters
- Dickens shifted the social frontiers of the novel
- The 18th-century realistic upper middle-class world was replaced by the one of the lower orders.
- He depicted Victorian society in all its variety, its richness and its squalor.
- He created:
- Caricatures → he exaggerated and ridiculed particular social characteristics of the middle, lower and lowest classes;
- weak female characters.
- He was on the side of the poor, the outcast, the working-class
- Themes
- Family, childhood and poverty.
- Dickens’s children are either innocent or corrupted by adults.
- Most of these children begin in negative circumstances and rise to happy endings which resolve the contradictions in their lives created by the adult world.
- Aim
- Dickens tried to persuade the common intelligence of the country to alleviate social sufferings.
- He was a acampaigning novelist and his books highlight all the great Victorian controversies:
- The faults of the legal system → Oliver Twist, Bleak House
- The horrors of factory employment → David Copperfield, Hard Times.
- Scandals in private schools → David Copperfield
- The appalling living conditions in the slums → Bleak House
- Style
- Dicken’s style → very rich and original
- The main stylistic features of his novels are:
- long list of objects and people;
- adjectives used in pairs or in groups of three and four;
- several details, not strictly necessary;
- repetitions of the same words and sentence structures;
- the same concepts are expressed more than once but with different words;
- use of antithetical images and ideas in order to underline the characters’s features;
- exaggeration of the characters’ faults;
- suspense at the end of the episodes or introduction of a sensational event to keep the readers’ interest.
Oliver Twist
- This Bildungsroman (an ‘education’ novel) appeared in installments in 1837
- It fictionalizes the humiliations Dickens experienced during his childhodd
- The protagonist Oliver Twist is always innocent and pure and remains incorruptible throughout the story
- The setting is London.
Hard Times
- Dickens attacked:
- social evils such as poor houses, unjust courts and the criminal underworld
- workhouses (poverty being equated to laziness)
- officials of the workhouses (abused the right of the poor as individuals and caused them further misery)
- It is a ‘denunciation novel’ → a powerful accusation of some of the negatve effects of the industrial society.
- The setting → the fictional city of Coketown, which stands for a real industrial mill town in mid-19th-century Victorian England (e.g. Manchester)
- Characters → people living and working in Coketwon, like the protagonist who believes in facts and statistics.
- His school tries to turn children into little machines that behave according to such rules.
- A commonly-repeated word is “Facts”
- Themes:
- A critique of materialism and Utilitarianism:
- a denunciation of the ugliness and squalor of the new industrial age;
- the gap between the rich and the poor.
- Aim → to illustrate the dangers of allowing people to become like machines and to suggest that without compassion and imagination, life would be unbearable.
Ex. 1@39
- insecurity
- experienced
- reversals
- unknown
- brought up
- starving
- undertaker
- cruelty
- run away
- pickpockets
- caught
- stricken
- charging
- kidnapped
- burglary
- wounded
- Investigations