Charles Dickens I INTRODUCTION Charles Dickens English author Charles Dickens ranks as one of the most popular writers in the history of world literature.
Publié le 12/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
Papers of the Pickwick Club (1836-1837; 1837); The Adventures of Oliver Twist (1837-1839; 1838); The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (1838-1839; 1839); The Old Curiosity Shop (1840-1841; 1841); Barnaby Rudge (1841); The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit (1843-1844; 1844); Dombey and Son (1846-1848; 1848); The Personal History of David Copperfield (1849-1850; 1850); Bleak House (1852-1853; 1853); Hard Times (1854); Little Dorrit (1855-1857; 1857); A Tale of Two Cities (1859); Great Expectations (1860-1861; 1861); Our Mutual Friend (1864-1865; 1865); and The Mystery of Edwin Drood (unfinished; 1870).
Illustration from Oliver TwistEnglish illustrator George Cruikshank gained fame for his collaboration with British novelist Charles Dickens.
In this 1839illustration for the novel Oliver Twist, Oliver is in the orphanage asking for more gruel.Hulton Deutsch
Through his fiction Dickens did much to highlight the worst abuses of 19th-century society and to prick the public conscience.
But running through the main plot of thenovels are a host of subplots concerning fascinating and sometime ludicrous minor characters.
Much of the humor of the novels derives from Dickens’s descriptions ofthese characters and from his ability to capture their speech mannerisms and idiosyncratic traits.
A Early Fiction
Dickens was influenced by the reading of his youth and even by the stories his nursemaid created, such as the continuing saga of Captain Murderer.
These childhoodstories, as well as the melodramas and pantomimes he saw in the theater as a boy, fired Dickens’s imagination throughout his life.
His favorite boyhood readingsincluded picaresque novels such as Don Quixote by Spanish writer Miguel de Cervantes and Tom Jones by English novelist Henry Fielding, as well as the Arabian Nights. In these long comic works, a roguish hero’s exploits and adventures loosely link a series of stories.
The Pickwick Papers, for example, is a wandering comic epic in which Samuel Pickwick acts as a plump and cheerful Don Quixote, and Sam Weller as a cockney version of Quixote’s knowing servant, Sancho Panza.
The novel’s preposterous characters, high spirits, and absurd adventures delighted readers.
After Pickwick, Dickens plunged into a bleaker world.
In Oliver Twist , he traces an orphan’s progress from the workhouse to the criminal slums of London.
Nicholas Nickleby, his next novel, combines the darkness of Oliver Twist with the sunlight of Pickwick .
Rascality and crime are part of its jubilant mirth.
The Old Curiosity Shop broke hearts across Britain and North America when it first appeared.
Later readers, however, have found it excessively sentimental, especially the pathos surrounding the death of its child-heroine Little Nell.
Dickens’s next two works proved less popular with the public.
Barnaby Rudge, Dickens’s first historical novel, revolves around anti-Catholic riots that broke out in London in 1780.
The events in Martin Chuzzlewit become a vehicle for the novel’s theme: selfishness and its evils.
The characters, especially the Chuzzlewit family, present a multitude of perspectives on greed and unscrupulous self-interest.
Dickens wrote it after a trip to the United States in 1842.
B Mature Fiction
Many critics have cited Dombey and Son as the work in which Dickens’s style matures and he succeeds in bringing multiple episodes together in a tight narrative.
Set in the world of railroad-building during the 1840s, Dombey and Son looks at the social effects of the profit-driven approach to business.
The novel was immediately successful.
Dickens always considered David Copperfield to be his best novel and the one he most liked.
The beginning seems to be autobiographical, with David’s childhood experiences recalling Dickens’s own in the blacking factory.
The unifying theme of the book is the “undisciplined heart” of the young David, which leads to all hismistakes, including the greatest of them, his mistaken first marriage.
Bleak House ushers in Dickens’s final period as a satirist and social critic.
A court case involving an inheritance forms the mainspring of the plot, and ultimately connects all of the characters in the novel.
The dominant image in the book is fog, which envelops, entangles, veils, and obscures.
The fog stands for the law, the courts, vestedinterests, and corrupt institutions.
Dickens had a long-standing dislike of the legal system and protracted lawsuits from his days as a reporter in the courts.
A novel about industry, Hard Times, followed Bleak House in 1854.
In Hard Times, Dickens satirizes the theories of political economists through exaggerated characters such as Mr.
Bounderby, the self-made man motivated by greed, and Mr.
Gradgrind, the schoolmaster who emphasizes facts and figures over all else.
In Bounderby’smines, lives are ground down; in Gradgrind’s classroom, imagination and feelings are strangled.
The pervading image of Little Dorrit is the jail.
Dickens’s memory of his own father’s time in debtors’ prison adds an autobiographical touch to the novel.
Little Dorrit also contains Dickens’s invention of the Circumlocution Office, the archetype of all bureaucracies, where nothing ever gets done.
Through this critique and others, suchas the circular legal system in Bleak House , Dickens also investigated the ways in which art makes meaning and the workings of his own narrative style.
A Tale of Two Cities is set in London and Paris during the French Revolution (1789-1799).
It stands out among the novels as a work driven by incident and event rather than by character and is critical both of the violence of the mob and of the abuses of the aristocracy, which prompted the revolution.
The successful Tale of Two Cities was soon followed by Great Expectations , which marked a return to the more familiar Dickensian style of character-driven narrative.
Its main character, Pip, tells his.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- John Milton I INTRODUCTION John Milton Seventeenth-century writer John Milton ranks as one of the greatest poets in the history of English literature.
- Comedy I INTRODUCTION Laurel and Hardy Stan Laurel, in overalls, and Oliver Hardy, left, formed one of the most popular comedy teams in motion-picture history.
- Ray Charles Ray Charles (1930-2004), American pianist and singer, one of the most influential figures in the history of popular music.
- Confucius I INTRODUCTION Confucius (551 or 552-479 BC), Chinese philosopher and educator, one of the most important individuals in Chinese history, and one of the most influential figures in world history.
- Musical I INTRODUCTION George Gershwin American pianist, songwriter, and composer George Gershwin was one of the most important figures in popular song in the 1920s and 1930s.