Victorians! discussion
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I read that Gilbert Keith Chesterton wrote many of the introductions to Dickens' novels. He said of Dickens He was the voice in England of this humane intoxication and expansion, this encouraging of anybody to be anything.



My library has the first Slater, Dickens 1970, but not the second. But in doing a search, I found a video by the BBC, published in 2003:
Uncovering the real Dickens, by Peter Ackroyd, described as A recreation of Charles Dickens' extraordinary life using a mix of documentary and dramatic reconstruction.

I know that his was a rags to riches story with the family ending up in the Marshalsea for his father's debts, aside from Charles who ended up in a blacking factory. bbc.co.uk whole section on historic figures including Mr Dickens.

Then he suddenly remembered the next installment of Our Mutual Friend was still on the train. At great personal peril, he went back to the train and retrieved it. He never missed a deadline!



I do know that this era produced much pornographic material however.

It does seem that while mistresses and affairs were "expected, pardoned, condoned," for the men, women were held to a different standard. Not surprising there....

Dickens said that he couldn't write a character until he'd named the character. Then he could make it come to life. In a part spoken by Kate Dickens, she described that her father as sometimes writing furiously, only to jump up and go to the mirror, make a series of strange faces, sometimes whisper words, and then rush back to his desk and again write furiously. He often acted out his writing before committing it to paper!

His daughter Mamie wrote in a memoir that he ran his house like a hospital or battle station, everything had to be in its place.

And it really doesn't seem the case the Victorian men could go above and against society. I think men and women have always felt the pressure to accept social norms.
I guess I differ too in feeling that Dickens' women characters, even the good ones, are very believable. I think there are many people of "good" conscience who exist very realistically within the world. I don't think you need a Becky Sharp-type character to make the story interesting -- she is a whole different case in a whole different story. Dickens' characters, whether viewed as good or bad, did make poor choices and mistakes and suffered the consequences -- just like we do in real life.

Dickens was quite fond of nicknames and gave all his ten children nicknames. For examples his son, Edward's nickname was Plorn and his son, Sydney was nicknamed Skittles.

It just goes to show, as my mother told me half a century ago, "you can hear anything you've a mind to."
Sometimes I wonder whether we should stop all publishing about English literature for a generation, or at least for a decade. It seems to me sometimes that critics are writing things not really because they have anything remarkably meaningful to say, but because they need to do so to justify their one-course teaching loads. It must be hard to keep coming up with things to say that haven't already been said dozens of times before; maybe that's why we get such comments as Ackroyd's, or the revival of the seemingly endless and totally unresolvable controversy over who really wrote King Lear.
Or am I just a curmudgeonly cynic?

http://charlesdickenspage.com/
I also loved this page which shows the original illustrations of some of the characters from Bleak House.
http://charlesdickenspage.com/illustr...

Thanks, Marjorie!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainme...
It is about Claire Tomalin's writing about Dickens.


I subscribe to TCM's "Now Playing" guide to their movies. In December Turner Classic Movie Channel is celebrating the Bicentennial of the birth of Charles Dickens by showing movies based on his books every Monday night. Yes, they (and I) know that Dickens was born on February 7, but they are doing this in December because of 'A Christmas Carol'.

The first is our current perception of Christmas, a..."
wonderful article...Thanks, Marjorie
Books mentioned in this topic
Bleak House (other topics)Dickens 1970 (other topics)
David Copperfield (other topics)
So everyone post away and let us get to know our upcoming author quite well.