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Representations of loss in Charles Dickens's Bleak house

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Title: Representations of loss in Charles Dickens's Bleak house
Author: Cameron, Susan Patricia
Abstract: The nineteenth century was a time of rapid change, brought about by increasing industrial development and changing patterns of thought and belief. Dickens's attitude to industrialism was ambivalent. He was not averse to progress, but feared that the ills of society would remain overshadowed. This dissertation explores representations of loss in Bleak House and examines some of the challenges the subject presents. The first chapter concentrates on examples of the wide range of losses with which Dickens deals in the novel to create the cumulative impression of individuals and a nation existing in a state of chaos and decay. Chapter Two focuses on the loss of physical life and the state of death-in-life. Chapter Three deals with the narrative techniques which Dickens uses to represent loss in the novel.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/989
Date: 2009-08-25
Citation:


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03Chapter1.pdf 40.91Kb PDF View/Open
07Bibliography.pdf 20.92Kb PDF View/Open
02Introduction.pdf 17.84Kb PDF View/Open
01Summary.pdf 7.099Kb PDF View/Open
00Front.pdf 6.741Kb PDF View/Open
05Chapter3.pdf 24.27Kb PDF View/Open
06Conclusion.pdf 13.22Kb PDF View/Open
04Chapter2.pdf 53.76Kb PDF View/Open

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