1 / 18

Great Expectations Charles Dickens

Great Expectations Charles Dickens. Menu. Introduction Background Discussion Starters. Great Expectations Charles Dickens. Great Expectations: Introduction. Is it childish to dream about a future completely different from what you expect to happen?. Great Expectations: Introduction.

garan
Télécharger la présentation

Great Expectations Charles Dickens

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Great Expectations Charles Dickens Menu Introduction Background Discussion Starters

  2. Great Expectations Charles Dickens

  3. Great Expectations: Introduction Is it childish to dream about a future completely different from what you expect to happen?

  4. Great Expectations: Introduction In Great Expectations, Pip is at first content with his future as a blacksmith’s apprentice. The blacksmith, his brother-in-law Joe, is much nicer than Pip’s own sister—who has brought him up “by hand.”

  5. Great Expectations: Introduction One day Pip wanders across the marshes to visit his parents’ graves. But instead, he finds a runaway convict who demands that Pip help him escape from his chains.

  6. Great Expectations: Introduction Although the man is later caught, Pip feels horribly guilty. He is sure Joe will be disappointed if he finds out what Pip has done.

  7. Great Expectations: Introduction But this frightening episode fades from Pip’s memory when he encounters even more remarkable people. He is invited to rich Miss Havisham’s house to be a playmate for Estella, the proud girl in her care.

  8. Great Expectations: Introduction Years ago, Miss Havisham’s fiancé stood her up at the altar. Ever since, she has remained in her wedding dress, let no sunlight into her house, and let the clocks stop. Everything is left just as it was the day of her heartbreak.

  9. Great Expectations: Introduction Pip’s friends all hope that Miss Havisham will “do something” for him—give him money. However, for Pip, the appeal of Miss Havisham’s house isn’t just the thought of money or the elegant lifestyle: It’s Estella.

  10. Great Expectations: Introduction And then, the unexpected happens! An anonymous benefactor sends money to pay for Pip’s education in London!

  11. Great Expectations: Introduction Is Miss Havisham giving Pip the money? Does she hope to make Pip into a gentleman for his own sake? Or is it for the sake of someone else?

  12. Great Expectations: Background Charles Dickens (1812–1870) was deeply concerned about the struggles of the poor and mistreated people. • During this period, people who simply could not pay their bills often went to debtors’ prison. • A criminal who was considered dangerous might be sent to what is now Australia to serve time.

  13. Great Expectations: Background In Dickens’s time, London was a rich city, but poor people lived in terrible squalor. • Children of those in debtors’ prison often had to support themselves. • A child might work up to sixteen hours a day. • Labor in a factory or work pulling a cart earned only pennies a day.

  14. Great Expectations: Background Shortly before his own father was sent to debtors’ prison, twelve-year-old Charles was sent to work at a shoe polish factory. • Dickens’s unfinished autobiography describes the suffering he endured as a child laborer. • He worked long hours in a cramped room infested with rats.

  15. Great Expectations: Background The unique history of Australia is tied to a thread in Great Expectations. • In Dickens’ time, British convicts were often punished in a way that might seem “cruel and unusual” by today’s standards. • Convicts thought to pose some threat to society might be shipped off to a distant British territory—what is now Australia.

  16. Great Expectations: Background During the time when Australia served as a penal colony for England, prisoners were deposited near what is now Sydney. • Only the strongest and hardest-working people could prosper in the harsh conditions. • Once sent to Australia, a convict was frequently forbidden to ever return to England.

  17. Great Expectations: Discussion Starters Discuss (1) Orphaned and then cared for by a harsh older sister, Pip stumbles upon great opportunity. • Is it best to jump at whatever opportunity comes along? Or should a person consider staying in familiar territory? • What problems might come from dreaming of a better future? What rewards?

  18. Great Expectations: Discussion Starters Discuss (2) Loyalty and gratitude are themes running through Great Expectations. • What are the qualities of a loyal friend? • Should a friend’s loyalty have limits? • Should a successful person show gratitude to those who have helped along the way?

More Related