The Melancholy Man: A Study of Dickens's Novels

Cover
Routledge, 22.07.2016 - 396 Seiten

First published in 1980, this book surveys Dickens’ growing power to drive deep into the causes of his contemporary conditions. It reveals the importance of nature to Dickens as a rich metaphor of human freedom and potentiality, and emphasises his concern with time and the problems of freedom. The author considers the peculiarity of Dickens being unanimously acclaimed as a great writer considering the difficulty in placing him definitively within the literary tradition. The author argues Dickens was an isolated figure, indifferent to changing fashions and with a strong sense of the dignity of human nature and that this formed the basis of his character and writings.

 

Inhalt

1 The Pickwick Papers
1
2 Oliver Twist
21
3 Nicholas Nickleby to Barnaby Rudge
55
4 From Chuzzlewit to Dombey
113
5 David Copperfield
166
6 Bleak House
202
7 Little Dorrit
244
8 Great Expectations
287
Our Mutual Friend
315
Bleak House and Contradiction
347
The Illustrations to Dombey and Son
355
Index
369
Urheberrecht

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