Dickens's Fiction: Tapestries of ConscienceAMS Press, 2003 - 195 sidor British writer Dickens (1812-70) extensively used such reiterative techniques as repetition, paradox, and multiple perspectives to increase the complexity and appeal of his fiction, says Friedman (English, City U. of New York-Queens College). He looks in detail at examples in eight works written at |
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... moral vision . Style and form , especially duplication , shape overall signifi- cance . Chapter 2 examines the effects of repetitive patterns regarding identity , heredity , and guilt in Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby . In Chapter 3 ...
... moral vision . Style and form , especially duplication , shape overall signifi- cance . Chapter 2 examines the effects of repetitive patterns regarding identity , heredity , and guilt in Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby . In Chapter 3 ...
Sida 162
... moral- ity remains clear and constant , some problems are not resolved , but merely evaded . In Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby , the adventures of each pro- tagonist intimate that providence will protect the innocent and ex- pose ...
... moral- ity remains clear and constant , some problems are not resolved , but merely evaded . In Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby , the adventures of each pro- tagonist intimate that providence will protect the innocent and ex- pose ...
Sida 167
... moral values are always clear . Although a repeated situation or duplicated story may sometimes cause us to have queries about the moral scheme implied by a book's outcome , and although paradoxes and diverse perspectives may lead us to ...
... moral values are always clear . Although a repeated situation or duplicated story may sometimes cause us to have queries about the moral scheme implied by a book's outcome , and although paradoxes and diverse perspectives may lead us to ...
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Weaving Stories | 1 |
Primal Secrets | 19 |
Paradox Puzzle Exemplum | 47 |
Upphovsrätt | |
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Agnes Fleming appears Aunt Betsey Bella benevolent Biddy Bleak House Boffin and Riah Bounderby Brownlow Carol Chapter chapter-titles characters Charles Dickens Cheeryble child Christmas daughter David Copperfield death despite Dickens Studies Annual Dickens's Dora Drummle earlier Edwin Leeford Ellen Ternan Estella Esther Eugene Fagin father fiction figure Fledgeby Forster Ghost Gradgrind Harry Maylie Harthouse Heep Hexam husband installment Jacob's Island Jarndyce Jenny John Harmon Lady Dedlock Lammle later letter Little Dorrit Lizzie London Madeline Magwitch marriage marry Micawber Miss Havisham moral Moreover mother murder Mutual Friend Nancy narrative narrator Nicholas Nickleby noticed novel observes Oliver Twist Oliver's paradox parents Peggotty perspectives Pickwick Pickwick Papers Pip's protagonist Ralph readers refers remarks resemblance reveals Riah's Rokesmith Rose Satis House Scrooge Scrooge's seeks seems seen Sissy sister Smike Squeers Steerforth story suggests surrogate tale tion victim Wegg wife Wilfer woman workhouse Wrayburn young