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Charles Dickensintroductory study, background, and resources
This is an introductory survey of Dickens and his work written for students and general readers who perhaps want to know more about this perennially popular novelist.
The first give potted plot summaries as well as critical insights which will be particularly useful for beginners. The latter explore recurrent symbols and those topics which Dickens made his own - for example nineteenth century London and its relation to the labyrinthine system of jurisprudence which permeates Bleak House, or the prisons, most notably in Little Dorrit. Donald Hawes clearly knows Dickens's work inside out, and all his arguments are illustrated by well-chosen details from the best known works. In most cases he gives some notion of their contemporary reception, plus an account of how these reputations have lasted into the twentieth century. There's a very good chapter on Dickens's unforgettable rogues, villains, and comic masterpieces, analysing why they so brilliantly conceived and executed. Another on the theatre places Dickens's enthusiasm for the genre firmly in the realm of what we would now call 'popular culture' - since at that time, in mid nineteenth century there was little else the lower orders could enjoy. The same was also true of Dickens's public readings from his own works - which both made him rich and probably shortened his life. I hadn't previously realised just how much Dickens's friend John Forster had played in the composition, revision, and editing of his writing, but there's a good chapter on Dickens's relationship with his friends and contemporaries. Other topics considered include prisons, education, doctors and hospitals, social class, Christmas, and even a section on animals - especially dogs and ravens (both of which Dickens possessed). So, Hawes covers all the major novels, the stories, and some of the occasional writing. With this and the thematic chapters, plus an extensive bibliography of further reading, there's everything here for someone who wants a comprehensive departure point for further Dickens studies. © Roy Johnson 2007 [more CHARLES DICKENS materials] Donald Hawes, Charles Dickens, London: Continuum, 2007, pp.167, ISBN 0826689648 |
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