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Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
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Charles Dickens February 7, 1812 – June 9, 1870
Dickens was born in Portsmouth, Hampshire to John Dickens, a naval pay clerk, and his wife Elizabeth Dickens. When he was five, the family moved to Chatham, Kent. When he was ten, the family relocated to Camden Town in London. His early years were an idyllic time. He thought himself then as a "very small and not-over-particularly-taken-care-of boy".
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He talked later in life of his extremely strong memories of childhood and his continuing photographic memory of people and events that helped bring his fiction to life. His family was moderately well-off, and he received some education at a private school but all that changed when his father, after spending too much money entertaining and retaining his social position, was imprisoned for debt.
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At the age of twelve, Dickens was deemed old enough to work and began working for ten hours a day in Warren's boot-blacking factory, located near the present Charing Cross railway station. He spent his time pasting labels on the jars of thick polish and earned six shillings a week. With this money, he had to pay for his lodging and help to support his family, which was incarcerated in the nearby Marshalsea debtors' prison.
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Dickens began work as a law clerk, a junior office position with potential to become a lawyer.
He did not like the law as a profession and after a short time as a court stenographer he became a journalist, reporting parliamentary debate and traveling Britain by stagecoach to cover election campaigns. His journalism formed his first collection of pieces Sketches by Boz and he continued to contribute to and edit journals for much of his life. In his early twenties he made a name for himself with his first novel, The Pickwick Papers.
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Great Expectations Dickens wrote and published Great Expectations in , and though the novel looks back to an earlier time ( ), the period of composition itself is noteworthy. Great Expectations looks back upon a period of pre-Victorian development that had become, by 1860, thoroughly historical. However, as a Victorian novel, Great Expectations is itself the product of a dynamic moment in history.
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Themes of Great Expectations
Ambition and Self-Improvement Social Class Crime, Guilt, and Innocence
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Characters From Great Expectations
They keep on Coming Back
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Pip Hero and Narrator Readers follow this character from childhood to young adulthood. Bildungsroman – novel of development The question of evil: cultural or just naturally vicious. Vulnerable from the beginning Critics believe strongly autobiographical
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The Convict Terrifies Pip, one of the worst of his culture. Despised by “good people.” He is a strange combination of horror for Pip as well as pity. Reminds Pip of a starving dog.
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Joe Gargery Best of friends as ever we were. . . What Larks!” .
His brother-in-law Joe is the closest thing to a father Pip has—but he is viewed by Pip more as a Peer than an authority. “It is a terrible thing to be ashamed of home.”
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Mrs. Joe Pip’s first wound—home is not a place of love but of frustration and discontent. The terrible truth that abused children often become what they hated and dreaded.
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Other Characters Introduced
Mr. Pumblechook, After Mr. Wopsle had said grace, my sister said to me, "Do you hear that? Be grateful." "Especially," said Mr. Pumblechook, "to them which brought you up by hand." Mrs. Hubble asked, "Why is it that the young are never grateful?" which Mr. Hubble solved by answering, "Naturally wicious." Joe spooned into my plate, at this point, about half a pint of gravy.
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