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Just another aspiring author trying to make his way into the world of writing.

Saturday 20 October 2012

Practice Makes Perfect: My first English Exam Essay


"Showing convincingly how characters develop and so achieve a sense of identity is an essential way in which novelists and poets engage fully with their readers"


    Authors often use varying techniques to engage fully with their readers. Charles Dickens, the author of Great Expectations, has been analysed to create a sense of identity through demonstrating how characters develop. This technique has been argued to be one of the essential ways in which Dickens engages with the reader fully, as it explores a much untouched area of society for his era- upward social mobility. However, when digesting this novel, it is unambiguous to see that Dickens utilises other methods in which to fashion a sense of identity to engage the readers, rather than showing development; two such approaches being symbolism and setting.
    
    To embark upon this exploration, we first need to analyse the limited ways in which Dickens uses development to create a sense of identity thus, engaging the reader.  A pinnacle aspect of identity development in which Dickens explores is social mobility. This rare progress in the nineteenth century is one of the key elements in which the book revolves around, and commences when Jaggers states “that he be immediately removed from his resent sphere of life and from this place, and be brought up as a gentleman.” (Ch. 18, Pg. 117) However, the beginning of the character Pips’ development of identity can be gleaned to be tainted with negative connotations. The quote stated prior is quite impersonal, and uses the legal dialect of the character Jaggers to describe this otherwise joyous and exhilarating transition in Pip’s life. Due to this, Dickens may very well be leaking his opinions upon his contextual society through this scenario. Mirrored in his novel, Dickens, like Pip, was a poor boy who rose to success and through the social classes, to eventually obtaining a high status. By describing Pip’s identity development into higher standings in such a way, could suggest that Dickens was not content with his new life. From being raised as poor, and to be catapulted into fame and fortune as a result of his writing, Dickens may have found this transition difficult to contend with, and may have been met by adversity from members of the upper class. Alternatively, Dickens could be representing his opinion on the class system as a whole. The author could be implying that to band people as rich or poor is to consume ones identity, and that identity can only be achieved through materialism, not personality.
    Contextual readers in the nineteenth century may have been fully engaged with this novel when reading it. As described before, by developing Pip’s social standing and creating a new sense of identity for him, Dickens explores a much isolated topic within his society. Readers then may have been shocked at such a concept: that a poor boy could infiltrate their lives of money and luxury. Today, contrastingly, readers may not be as engaged with this concept, but rather relate to it easier. The invisible barrier of class has become more penetrable over time; therefore readers may be able to relate to Dickens’ characters more, than during his era. As a result, by showing how characters develop and achieve a sense of identity, readers may become fully engaged within the novel.

    Although the development of characters can be a powerful way to achieve a sense of identity, this is not the only essential way in which Dickens engages the reader fully. Rather, Dickens’ use of landscape and setting can achieve similar or even better results. Many novelists use setting to covey a certain message to the reader. Dickens uses this technique in such a way that the characters identity is portrayed through their surroundings; therefore, engaging the reader. Dickens describes Pip’s home to be “marsh country, down by the river, within, as the river wound, twenty miles of the sea.” (Ch. 1, Pg. 3) There are a lot of connotations associated with this use of setting which can reveal deeper depths to Pip’s identity. Not only does it give immediate impressions of an underprivileged existence, the use of the river and the sea gives certain fluidity and movement associations with Pip. Dickens may be suggesting here Pip’s need for change, as the tide changes; combined with Pip’s confinement, like the water flowing within the rivers course. As a result, a sense of identity is created, without the need to show development.
    This use of setting has many personal connections with Dickens. Dickens, as a child, was moved to Kent with his family. For Pip’s home and further locations in the novel, Dickens draws upon personal experience to fuel his location choice. By doing so, Dickens may be showing his fondness for these landscapes, as they played an important part in his life. On the other hand, Dickens continues to describe Pip’s location as a “bleak place overgrown with nettles” (Ch. 1, Pg. 3) this may indeed draw opposed inferences upon Dickens’ opinion of his childhood home. By depicting the setting as “bleak” with “nettles” does provide negative connotations; implying that Dickens may not have reminisced his childhood with fond memories.
    This novel has often been related to having aspects of the gothic nature. A typical gothic genre includes landscapes and settings that are far away. By using setting to achieve a sense of identity may engage readers as Dickens uses local, familiar locations in his novel, rather than exotic, ostentatious ones- as in line with the typical gothic genre. Both contextual and modern day readers may experience a sense of familiarity within Great Expectations, due to this choice of setting, making it increasingly easier to become engaged with the novel. If Dickens selected a more outlandish setting, readers may not have been able to engage fully with the book; even more so for nineteenth century readers, as travel abroad was not as accessible as it is today. Therefore, as a result of Dickens using setting to achieve a sense of identity will engage the readers fully within the novel.

    The last exploration into Great Expectations takes the form of symbolism. This method is often a favourite of Dickens, and appears throughout the novel. Dickens uses symbolism in such a way, that like setting, it can achieve a more profound sense of identity while engaging the readers fully. Time and Miss Havisham are often related heavily, exposing certain elements regarding identity. When Dickens writes Pip’s first encounter with Miss Havisham at Satis house, he notices that “her watch had stopped at twenty minutes to nine, and that a clock in the room had stopped at twenty minutes to nine” (Ch. 8, Pg. 49) This symbolism of frozen time can demonstrate certain characteristics of Miss Havisham’s identity. A certain air of self-created, timeless pain emits from this imagery. Dickens’ symbolism here may be highlighting Miss Havisham’s prerequisite for self-torture, as she decided to freeze time at the moment her fiancé left her. Ideas of a self-created purgatory exude from this symbolism also; as if Miss Havisham is destined to remain in her timeless state until her revenge has been accomplished. Thus, this symbolism may reflect upon her identity, as her need for pain and continuous torture.
    Such ideas could be imitated from Dickens’ past. Like Miss Havisham stuck in her timeless hell, Dickens’ father was sent to prison for his collation of debt. His father, much like Miss Havisham, created his own ‘unhappy ending’ by not paying his debts. It could be inferred that Dickens is suggesting that people create their own bad outcomes, and inflict pain upon themselves, rather than being products of other people’s actions.
   Using symbolism to achieve as sense of identity can engage the readers fully, as they become more involved within the novel. A tone of mystery can be created when introducing symbolism to the reader, as they attempt to interpret its meaning; as a result, the reader becomes actively involved within the novel.
     
   Showing convincingly how characters develop and so achieve a sense of identity can be an essential way in which novelists and poets engage fully with their readers. The use of social mobility to highlight development is quite effective in creating identity and engaging the readers. However, Dickens does use alternative techniques with a more successful result. Using location and setting portray an instant impression of a characters identity, and the familiar of the setting can create engagement; while symbolism can conjure mystery into a novel, that makes the reader engage by interpreting the hidden meanings. However, does identity have to be the central motif to create engagement? Can other motifs such as the class system or the criminal justice system engage the readers just as well?

Bibliography:
Charles Dickens (1992). Great Expectations, Wordsworth Classics, Hertfordshire

Sunday 7 October 2012

Façade


 The mirror,
Its reflective face taunts me as,
I glare into the unforgiving depths.

The hand,
Caresses the un-crafted scars,
Prize of the former and forthcoming.

The tear,
Cascades over the lies and hatred,
Crafting the familiar path. Unchanged.

The silence,
Engulfs the beating,
Refining the veils.

The self-destruction remains.
Concealed by my,
Façade