Similarities and Differences C.DICKENS' FICTION AND CONTEMPORARY REALITY Patrick Indri - 5ALS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Essential Question: What was the impact of the Industrial Revolution?
Advertisements

Child Labour Save The Childhood.
A.Rotolo I.T.I. Malignani - Udine THE AGE OF REFORM
The Life of Charles Dickens Dickens was born in London, England on February 7, He lived in poverty and suffered greatly. When he was 12, his father,
Dickens’s social criticism
The industrial revolution The industrial revolution started in England and it spread throughout Europe in the nineteenth century.
Social Impact of the Industrial Revolution
The Effects of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. The Transatlantic Slave Trade effected Africa, Europe, and the Americas in very different and significant.
LIVING AND WORKING CONDITIONS DURING THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION.
Oliver Twist by C. Dickens
A Christmas Carol Background. CHARLES DICKENS One of the greatest English writers Wrote to show the injustices of the world and to make readers, hopefully,
The Life of Charles Dickens Dickens was born in London, England on February 7, When he was 12, his father was jailed for not being able to pay his.
CHARLES DICKENS’ FICTION VS CONTEMPORARY REALITY Liceo Scientifico “A. Einstein” Class: 5 ALS Iacumin Jessica.
Charles Dickens’ fiction and contemporary reality.
The Victorian Novels had different cultural themes. The most important were:  Children’s exploitation;  Life conditions;  Pollution. I will present.
Charles Dickens The Victorian Age vs The 21 st Century Santini Leonardo 5 A.
Liceo Scientifico “A. Einstein” School year: Class: 5 ALS Student: Vitale Elisa.
What were the main social changes brought about by the Industrial Revolution?
C. DICKENS' FICTION AND CONTEMPORARY REALITY SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES.
Life in the Industrial Revolution
The Social Issues of the Industrial Revolution
The Victorian Novel V^A Nicolò Zentilin Claudia Tomasello.
Lesson 3.7. Knight’s Charge  How did Napoleon become famous?  How was Napoleon able to take over France?  What was Napoleon’s “big mistake?”  If Mr.
CHARLES DICKENS Charles Dickens is a very important and famous English writer . He is the most popular novelist of his time. He lived and wrote in.
CHAPTER 13 Section 1:Origins of the Industrial Revolution Section 2:The Factory System Section 3:New Methods and Business Organizations Section 4: Living.
THE VICTORIAN NOVEL DEAN CRISTINA & ZANABONI FEDERICA 5A.
Similarities and Differences: C. Dickens' fiction and contemporary reality.
NOWADAYS’ CHARLES DICKENS bringing up to date themes of Charles Dickens’ novel 05/03/20151Fiodor Nicola Misuri.
By: Valerie Kubalak Period 5.  Families were divided.  Women took up new roles.  There were child soldiers along with elder soldiers.  Many wounded.
TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction Child abuse Poverty and malnutrition Bad education Bad education Close mentality appearances and prejudices Sources.
WORLD HISTORY II Chapter 7: The Industrial Revolution Begins
The Industrial Revolution
Charles Dickens.
The values of the Victorian Age Utilitarian philosophy Importance given to the apparence Faith in God Optimism Faith in progress Philantrophism.
INDUSTRIALIZATION Chapter 25 Section 2. Key Terms  Urbanization  Middle Class.
A Christmas Carol.
Charles Dickens William Powell Frith, Portrait of Charles Dickens, London, Victoria and Albert Museum.
The Structure of 19 th Century Society Suffering peasants in the Irish Famine.
THE MOST POPULAR LITERARY GENRE IN THE VICTORIAN AGE WAS… THE NOVEL WHY? Because the……………… read a lot of literature. middle classes They borrowed books.
Industrial Revolution Impacts British Society Pages
The Human Population and Its Impact Chapter 6. Core Case Study: Are There Too Many of Us? (1)  Estimated 2.4 billion more people by 2050  Are there.
Bidut Giulia, VB. The relationship between classes The effects of the Industrial Revolution such as the growth of towns (Dickens, Hard Times, Coketown)
POPULATION Problems. Thomas Malthus Believed we can not manage population levels ourselves Two Key components of Population management: Positive Population.
Effects of the Industrial Revolution on Culture. 1. Slavery is Abolished (in Britain) Because some were morally against slavery (think it’s just wrong)
The Greatest Change to Human Life since the Neolithic Revolution 12,000 years ago!
THE VICTORIAN NOVEL Raffaele Contin Giulia Paparot VA a.s. 2010/2011.
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Mr. Trbovich World History.
Essential Question: What was the impact of the Industrial Revolution?
Essential Question: What was the impact of the Industrial Revolution?
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
How does historical context help you better understand literature?
The Industrial Revolution
Industrialization Chapter 9.2.
Social Commentator and critic
CHARLES DICKENS Charles Dickens is a very important and famous English writer . He is the most popular novelist of his time. He lived and wrote in.
Industrial Revolution Impacts British Society
Social Consequences of the Industrial Revolution
Today’s Essential Question:
Charles Dickens William Powell Frith, Portrait of Charles Dickens, London, Victoria and Albert Museum.
SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES
Child Labour at the end of 19th century and in the present
RELIGIOUS ATTITUDES TO WORLD POVERTY.
Victorian London Living and working.
Unit 2: African-Americans in the New Nation ( )
Essential Question: What was the impact of the Industrial Revolution?
THIS IS Jeopardy. THIS IS Jeopardy With Your Host... Mr. Demetral.
Do Now.
Charles Dickens William Powell Frith, Portrait of Charles Dickens, London, Victoria and Albert Museum.
Contemporary Theorists
VICTORIAN NOVEL Queen Victoria reigns for over 60 years ( )
Presentation transcript:

Similarities and Differences C.DICKENS' FICTION AND CONTEMPORARY REALITY Patrick Indri - 5ALS

Objectives and Structure Objectives ◦Identifying the main themes of Dickens' literary production. ◦Gaining awareness of the contemporary reality trough the analysis and the actualization of Charles Dickens' themes. Structure ◦Dickens: a social novelist ◦Poverty ◦Working conditions ◦Pollution ◦Child exploitation ◦Education

Dickens: a social novelist Charles Dickens' fiction is a dramatization of the social problems of the Victorian Age ◦Poverty, precarious working conditions, class prejudice and child labor His production develops a critique of the social stratification and of the terrible consequences of utilitarianism on lower classes Hard Times is one of the best examples of social novel due to his focus on the social and economic problems of a symbolically-called industrial city, Coketown A polluted city of the Victorian Age

Poverty - Dickens Charles was born in a family that suffered from poverty ◦Attention for the poor condition of the lower working class He kept a sympathetic attitude towards poor people ◦poor people (especially women and workers) deserved compassion ◦this belief is in contrast with the Utilitarian doctrine and the Puritan principles He focused on the consequences of poverty ◦Epidemic disease proliferated in the rotten boroughs ◦the overcrowded cities were full of criminal and pickpokets ◦alcoholism was a serious problem for poor people Poor people on the street

Poverty nowadays Nowadays poverty has become a world wide issue, going belong the limits of Coketown or England ◦963 million people live in poverty ◦3 billion people earns less than 2 USD in a day ◦almost a third of the world population has no access to medical resources The consequences of poverty are devastating ◦A lot of clochards and beggars can be found in almost every city ◦Alcoholism, smoking and drug addiction are one of the main causes of death and a source of violence and degrade ◦Illegal activities are one of the direct consequences of poverty Poverty is no longer considered as a God's punishment ◦Thinkers now agree that poverty is a plague to be fought ◦Dignity and well being are some of the universal rights of men A beggar in Italy

Working conditions - Dickens Oliver Twist and Hard Times provide a complete picture of the working condition during the industrialization process ◦Workers had to work for up to 16 hours per day ◦Factory work exposed to dangerous inhalations of smoke ◦The rhythm of machinery was in contrast with the rhythm of nature ◦The monotonous and repetitive work brought workers to alienation ◦The mass of lower class workers overcrowded the cities ◦Children and women were usually exploited as a low cost source of work ◦No kind of work-tutelage was adopted: illnesses and injuries were a common and disgraceful event Factory boys

Working conditions nowadays Working conditions have improved since the end of the 19th Century ◦Workers must not work for more than 8 hours every day ◦Working is now considered as a Universal Right ◦"L'Italia è una repubblica democratica fondata sul lavoro", Art. 1 of the Italian Constitution ◦Strikes and workers' associations are now permitted ◦Paid holidays are guaranteed to every worker ◦Children must not work while women have the same rights of men Unemployment and low salaries are the main problems of the industrialized countries ◦Poor countries are still fighting child labor and terrible working conditions ◦In 2000 Nike was accused of child exploytation in eastern Asia Teachers asking for higher salaries

Child exploitation - Dickens Dickens describes Oliver's condition in the workhouse ◦Children had to work for hours and were poorly fed ◦They suffered slow starvation ◦Everyone asking for more food would be punished with expulsion Cambridge University reveals the role of children in the Industrial Revolution ◦Industrial revolution was powered by child slaves ◦They were fast learning, malleable and cheap ◦More than a half of all the English children were laborers in the middle 19th Century ◦There were more than 1 million child workers Oliver Twist asking for food

Child exploitation nowadays Child labour is now considered illegal ◦Child labour refers to children from 3-4 to 15 years old ◦Despite being illegal it is a phenomenon which troubles the entire world ◦More than 150 million children are working up to 15 hours per day Child labour is more frequent in poor countries ◦Child labourers are adopted because of they low costs and the manual ability ◦Carpets and shoes production often involves children ◦Parents usually sell their children in order to earn money ◦Child soldiers are frequently used in African wars ◦More than 50% of child labourers do risky works A girl carrying bricks

Pollution - Dickens Dickens presents the terrible air condition of London in a famous extract of Bleak House ◦"Smoke lowering down from the chimney pots, making a soft black drizzle [...], fog everywhere" -chapter 1 ◦London is a critically overcrowded and polluted city ◦1858, Great Stink, River Thames is full of rubbish making the air unbreathable Coketown presentation provides a description of the consequences of pollution in Victorian Age industrial cities ◦City walls were blackened by smoke which made it hard to breath ◦Black prevails on everything ◦All the bricks were painted "like the face of a savage" London: overcrowded and polluted

Pollution nowadays Pollution is one of the main problems of the 21st Century ◦Urban pollution has increased because of the large number of cars and petrol-powered machinery in general ◦Coal power plants are still the main source of energy for industries ◦Nuclear energy and renewable forms of energy could be the answer for the increasing level of pollution in the world The consequences of pollution could be devastating ◦Climate change is a reality and will lead the extinction of several species ◦Earth temperature will rise as well as the sea level ◦Ozone depletion will increase skin cancers, blindness, photo aging and will damage crops and food production A power plant in China

Education - Dickens Victorian education ◦Elementary Education Act (1870) increased literacy rate in England ◦Despite the act many remained hostile to Universal Education, rejecting mass education ◦An educated working class meant more revolutions and less profit for capitalists ◦Dickens was a strong believer of a non-sectarian and Universal education ◦However he never offers practical solutions Dickens develops the theme of education in Hard Times, using the character of Mr. Thomas Gradgrind ◦He is a "man of fact" who accepts only data and cold facts or numbers ◦He thinks he can measure everything, even humans ◦He rejects every kind of emotion Mr. Gradgrind

Education nowadats Education is guaranteed as one of the Universal Right of men ◦Due to the Right of Education elementary education is free ◦Public schools in England are mandatory from 5 to 15 years ◦Pre-primary education and higher education are not free but should be accessible to anyone Nowadays 99.7% of the population of England can read and write ◦World literacy rate is 84.1% ◦Africa is the continent with the lower literacy rate ◦Universal education is one of the most important cultural objectives of 21st Century African students

Resources