Dickens’s social criticism
The Industrial Revolution and…
The Industrial Revolution:a period of big changes
1760 - 1890LATERRicher farmers took over the smaller onesSmall farmers lost their job and moved to townFactories became biggerMany towns grew rapidly
BEFOREBritain was a rural countryMost people lived and worked in farmsTowns were small
The Industrial Revolution had its roots in the slow but continuous pace of improvements and
innovations of the previous periods: the exploitation of the New World and the creation
of an overseas empire which provided raw materials and absorbed manufactured products
the availability of capital; the development of trade and commerce; the growth in population; the improved conditions in transport and
communication (railways, roads and canals); scientific progress caused great changes in industry:
the invention of new machinery improved the working techniques.
Immigration to the new industrial districts brought many evils in factories and houses:
Overpopulation and lack of elementary principles of sanitation.
Men, women, and children worked to the limits of physical endurance and for starvation wages.
Working and living conditions
In the factories workers worked 13 hours a day for little money. 2/3 of them were children.
Whole families were crowded in single rooms where lack of hygiene led to cholera and other health diseases.
The Victorian age (1837-1901)
Victoria was the niece of King William IV.She became Queen when she was only 18
but she was to reign for 64 years.She found a country in difficult
circumstances owing to:1. a slump in industry; 2. a period of bad crops.
All this led to a period of misery called "the hungry forties".
The Victorian age was marked by a number of social achievements such as:
An important Victorian novelist
NAME: Charles DickensBORN:1812,near PortsmouthEDUCATION:at William Giles’s School,
Chatham. He attended Wellington House Academy in London between 1824 and 1827.
JOB: he worked as a clerk in a lawyer’s office, as a journalist, as a parliamentary reporter.
IMPORTANT EVENTS: at the age of 12, his father was sent to jail for debts. D. was forced to work in a factory.
D’s most famous novels
Pickwick Papers: a series of anecdotal stories regarding the members of a London club and their comic encounters.
Oliver Twist: the story of a boy who lives in an orphanage and then moves to a workhouse where he experiences brutality.
A Christmas Carol. This morality tale tells the story of Mr. Scrooge, a man who undergoes an experience of redemption during the night of Christmas Eve.
Other novels
David Copperfield: his most autobiographical novel, about the life of a boy from childhood to maturity.
Hard Times: set in the fictitious industrial town of Coketown.
Bleak houses: against the abuses and the procrastinations of the law.
Great Expectations: about Pip, an orphan brought up by his half-sister and her father.
D’s most important features
Social criticism In his works D. denouced child exploitation and ill-treatment, terrible conditions of industrial workers and prisoners, poverty, the system of law, hypocrisy and greed for money.
Autobiographical elementsMany novels incorporate elements of his life such as unhappy childhood experiences, prison life. He even based some memorable characters on the members of his family.
CharacterizationHe was a master in the portrayal of characters. He used physical description or even names to indicate the characters’moral or spiritual values or vices. However, his characters are more literary "figures" because of their exagerated humorous and caricaturist descriptions and lack of psychological insight.
Description of environment The setting of Dickens’s novels is always described in detail as it must incorporate the characters and convey the author’s assumptions. In his novels Dickens described several settings: the contryside, provincial towns, industrial settlements and above all London.
Style Dickens put together fantasy and reality, humour and sentimentalism, comic and tragic elements. This is reflected in his style, made up of a colourful and careful choice of adjectives, repetition of words, contrasting images, ideas and ironic remarks.