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- Great Expectations Notes (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Reading Pointers for Sharper Insights (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter I (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter II (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter III (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter IV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter V (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter VI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter VII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter VIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter IX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter X (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XIV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XVI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XVII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XVIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XIX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXIV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXVI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXVII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXVIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXIX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXIV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXVI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXVII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXVIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XXXIX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XL (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLIV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLVI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLVII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLVIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter XLIX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter L (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LIV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LV (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LVI (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LVII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LVIII (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
- Great Expectations Chapter LIX (Great Expectations: Literary Touchstone Classic)
Reading Pointers for Sharper Insights
To better appreciate the richness and complexity of Great Expectations, the reader should consider the following:
Caricatures, Stereotypes, and Conventions:
While many of Dickens' characters seem exaggerated and outlandish, they allow the relatively flat main characters to seem normal by comparison. Static characters like Joe–unfailing in his goodness–and Miss Havisham–equally unfailing in her bitterness–emphasize Pip's change from contented lad, to social climber, to regretful adult.
Some popular literary conventions of his time that Dickens employs include:
the poor orphan with no permanent home or parent-figure
the reclusive woman in white
the mysterious benefactor
unrequited love
the country as the center of morality and happiness
the city as the seat of corruption and despair
clarity of thought after sickness and madness
the noble savage, the kindly criminal, and the charming scoundrel
Social Class and the “Gentleman”
When Pip is adopted by his benefactor and sent to London to become a gentleman, it is not at all clear what type of person he is to become.
Nineteenth century England was a time of rapid social change. Wealth had traditionally been measured by land ownership, but a trend toward a cashbased economy had begun. The Industrial Revolution created a middle class that was, in many ways, more economically powerful than the landowners.
As the economic power of the middle class grew, people demanded political power as well. With this increase in political influence came the demand for social acceptance The concept of the gentleman, therefore, evolved and became a confusing ideal for the Victorians by the middle of the nineteenth century,:
On the one hand, a gentleman was a gentleman by right of birth, but wealthy industrialists claimed the right to be called gentlemen by virtue of their economic and political power.
Clergy of the Church of England, military officers, and members of Parliament were regarded as gentlemen simply because of their occupations.
The Victorians also added a strong moral component to the ideal of the gentleman that even they themselves found difficult to define. Which behavior would be considered proper and which would not were problems that society wrestled with constantly.
While those who held certain jobs were eligible to be called gentlemen, others were not. Note how Pip and Herbert talk about Miss Havisham's father's having been a brewer–and also a gentleman.
Pip can be compared with Herbert Pocket, Matthew Pocket, Bentley Drummle, and finally with Joe Gargery to understand where Dickens's sympathies lay.
The Hulks and Convicts
The Hulks were large ships without masts, which had been used in battle but had been removed from service and re-fitted to house male convicts awaiting transport to British colonies. The practice began in the 1770s and continued until 1856—four years before the writing of Great Expectations.
Transporting prisoners was a common way of dealing with England's worst criminals. Convicts were routinely taken to the British colonies in America until the Revolutionary War, and after that, to Australia and Tasmania. The sentence of transportation was occasionally for a specified period of time, seven years for example, but gradually, it became a life sentence. Many died during the four-to six-month journey, and many more were ill or dying when they arrived.
Eventually, however, transportation of convicts became expensive, and settlers who were in the colonies complained about having to accept the criminals. The British government then began to look at other ways of dealing with convicts, and a new period of penal reform and prison construction was begun.
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admonition – a reprimand
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fender – a screen placed in front of the fireplace to prevent hot coals from falling out
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bane – destruction
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Titan – a reference to Greek mythology; Titans were the predecessors to the Greek gods. The term also refers to a very large or powerful person or thing
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stark – stiff
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hasped – fastened, locked
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harebells – types of plants with blue and which bell-shaped flowers
Recommended Questions
- How does Dickens portray Pip's learning about life in two episodes of Great Expectations? Great Expectations by...
- In Great Expectations, how is Matthew Pocket going to help Pip?
- What are the three stages of Pip's expectations? Comment on them.
- In Great Expecations, why does Pip want to educate Joe? It has to be from Ch.13-15.
- Why does Estella behave as a changed women at the end of the novel?
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