Charles Dickens Research Paper

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Charles Dickens work was based on realism in novels that he did; he liked to write about the real world and his feelings. He wrote about the real tragedies that were going on, for example “A tale of two cities”.
Dickens was famed for his description of the hardship of the working class, his complex plots and his sense of humour. But he is mostly remembered for the characters he created. Early in Dickens career his novels ability to capture the everyday man but also create characters which readers could relate too. It all began in 1836 when Dickens wrote numerous novels for The Pickwick Paper, all containing unique, believable characters and vivid physical descriptions.
Dickens friend, John Forster said that Dickens made “characters real existences, …show more content…

The industrial revolution created many goods but it also created miserable living conditions for the workers. Overcrowding in England’s cities and the increase of immigrants from Ireland resulted in disease and hunger for the labouring classes. Children were abused by their employers and worked twelve to fourteen hours in the mills for very little allowance at the age of 9. They would spend their days in the mills tied to the machines or in the coalmines pulling coal carts. Their fingers were much smaller than adults so employers preferred to employ children for picking out burrs from cotton and wool.
His work clearly includes all the chaos that’s going on in England at this time. For example:

Oliver Twist is a story about a young orphan named Oliver and his attempts to be a good soul in a world that refuses to help. His mother dies at birth and so he is sent to an orphanage where they are all treated terribly and fed very little. When he turns 9 he is sent to the workplace to …show more content…

She marries Charles Darnay, but they’re a few others that wanted her hand.
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.” -Opening paragraph in the novel

William Shakespeare wrote plays and poems, which were mostly comedies and historical until he found his true love of writing tragedies and dark dramas, such as Hamlet and Macbeth. Shakespeare wrote plays that appealed to both the commoner and the queen, he even performed in his own plays.
Shakespeare wrote his earliest works in the traditional ways of writing, but when Shakespeare was writing plays like A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo and Juliet, and Richard II in the late 16th century, he gradually developed and changed his writing style from the traditional form to a more self-expressive

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