Flight from gentility: the role of working-class characters in Dickens' novels
dc.contributor.author
Slaughter, Pam
en
dc.date.accessioned
2013-06-26T14:04:47Z
dc.date.available
2013-06-26T14:04:47Z
dc.date.issued
1981
dc.description.abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to study working-class
characters in Dickens's novels in relation to one particular
aspect of social change, namely gentility, and to connect
this with Dickens's social criticism and with his distinctive
qualities as a creative artist. I shall argue that gentility
is not merely a concern with superficial manners and behaviour,
but that the concept became, during the last decades of the
eighteenth century and the whole of the nineteenth., the most
important psychological weapon in the struggle for social
and political power in a newly-emerging class society. As
such., gentility provides the main target for Dickens's
attacks upon class relations and is the focus of his most
wide-reaching criticisms of English society. - Indeed, so
central is the concept of gentility to Dickens's thought,
that it can even be used as a critical term to define his
own particular kinds of strengths and weaknesses as a writer.
It is a main purpose of this thesis to show the interrelationship
of these several aspects of gentility with the pattern
of Dickens's life and with the changing society of
nineteenth-century England.
Part One of this thesis considers Dickens's attitudes
to the class divisions within Victorian society by studying
his deployment of class language. In this section I also
compare Dickens's fictional rendering of working-class
characters with that of his contemporaries and his eighteenth
century predecessors., in order to see what is distinctive in
Dickens's treatment, and to evaluate how far he may be
termed a realist.
Parts Two to Four trace, chronologically, the development
of Dickens's antagonism towards gentility. I divide his
work into three periods (early, middle, late), in each of
which a different, but recurrent type of working-class
character tends to predominate in the novels. The qualities
and values Dickens associates with each type can be related
to his current underlying social and artistic preoccupations.
Because of the accumulative poetic intensity of
Dickens's fictional style, discussion of character or incident,
lifted from its allusive context., almost always results in
an impoverishment, or even an actual confusion, of meaning.
For this reason, the chapters dealing with single novels
are divided into two parts. They begin with a general
discussion of one particular type of working-class character
frequently found in Dickens's fiction. An individual
example of this type is then studied in the total context
of the specific novel to see how its qualities fit intol, and
help to shape, the imaginative pattern of the whole work.
The novels chosen for this close study are thus those which
contain a character who is a major example of one of these
recurrent working-class types in Dickens's fiction, and this
is why Hard Times and Little Dorrit are not discussed in
detail.
A further aim of this thesis is to redress a tendency
in Dickens criticism to underrate the role of working-class
characters in the novels. It is striking that Dickens
himself consistently speaks of them as among his most
important artistic achievements. It is my contention that
to ignore this particular aspect of Dickens's work is to
miss much of what is most exciting in his art and most
radical in his social vision.
en
dc.identifier.other
481155
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/7420
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
Literature
en
dc.subject
Mass
en
dc.subject
media
en
dc.subject
Performing
en
dc.subject
arts
en
dc.title
Flight from gentility: the role of working-class characters in Dickens' novels
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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