Charles Dickens: Hard times/ Bleak house

By: Marsh, NicholasMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Analysing textsPublication details: London Palgrave Macmillan 2015Description: xiv,254pISBN: 9781137608291Subject(s): Literature and society | LITERARY CRITICISM / General | LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh | LITERARY CRITICISM / Books & Reading | Hard times (Dickens, Charles) | Bleak House (Dickens, Charles) | Literature and society | Great BritainDDC classification: 823.8 Summary: "Dickens was an unprecedented phenomenon in his lifetime, drawing crowds of thousands to his professional readings in Britain and America, provoking demonstrations of public grief when his child-characters died, and developing increasing celebrity as his novels unfolded in weekly or monthly episodes. Dickens's anger at corruption and injustice, his championing of the downtrodden and the poor, added to the affection in which he was held by his public. Bleak House and Hard Times are two of Dickens' most celebrated works and are excellent examples of his literary talent. In this invaluable guide, Nicholas Marsh provides close analysis of selected passages from these texts, exploring themes such as morality and society, rhetoric and imagery, characterisation and the portrayal of women. The discussion of the texts themselves is followed by an account of the author's life and a sample of critical opinions from both the time of publication and the present day"--
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"Dickens was an unprecedented phenomenon in his lifetime, drawing crowds of thousands to his professional readings in Britain and America, provoking demonstrations of public grief when his child-characters died, and developing increasing celebrity as his novels unfolded in weekly or monthly episodes. Dickens's anger at corruption and injustice, his championing of the downtrodden and the poor, added to the affection in which he was held by his public. Bleak House and Hard Times are two of Dickens' most celebrated works and are excellent examples of his literary talent. In this invaluable guide, Nicholas Marsh provides close analysis of selected passages from these texts, exploring themes such as morality and society, rhetoric and imagery, characterisation and the portrayal of women. The discussion of the texts themselves is followed by an account of the author's life and a sample of critical opinions from both the time of publication and the present day"--

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