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William Makepeace Thackeray 1811-1863

William Makepeace Thackeray 1811-1863. Quotations:. “A good laugh is a sunshine in a house". “A fool can no more see his own folly than he can see his ears”. “People hate, as they love, unreasonably” Made by Dokhuzeva F.A.

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William Makepeace Thackeray 1811-1863

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  1. William Makepeace Thackeray1811-1863 Quotations: “A good laugh is a sunshine in a house" “A fool can no more see his own folly than he can see his ears” “People hate, as they love, unreasonably” Made by Dokhuzeva F.A.

  2. "Thackeray possesses great talent. Of all the European writers of the present time Dickens alone can be placed on a level with the author of Vanity Fair. What a wealth of art, how precise and thorough are his observations, what a knowledge of life, of the human heart, what a bright and noble power of love, what a subtle humour, how precise and distinct are his depictions, how wonderfully charming his narration." Chernyshevsky

  3. Bust of William Thackeray at the age of eleven. William Makepeace Thackeray was born in a prosperous middle-class family. His father was a well-to-do English official in Calcutta, India. When the boy was six years old, he was taken from Calcutta, where he was born, to England to be educated. From Charterhouse school he passed on to Cambridge University.

  4. Richmond Thackeray, the writer’s father The writer’s mother. Anne Becher Thackeray 1855.

  5. W. M.. Thackeray at the age of 20 W. M.. Thackeray at the age of 18

  6. Palace Green. W.M. Thackeray’s Study W. M. Thackeray lived in this house 13, Great Coram Street

  7. While a student, William spent much of his time drawing cartoons and writing verses, chiefly parodies. He did not stay long at the University, for he could not bear the scholastic atmosphere of the place. Besides, his ambition was to become an artist, so he left the University without graduating and went to Germany, Italy and France to study art. In Germany he became acquainted with Goethe, and this meeting left a deep impression on him. Caricature of Thackeray drawn by himself

  8. Isabella Shawe with her daughter in 1838 Isabella Shawe, Thackeray’s future wife

  9. Harriet (Minni) Thackeray, the youngest daughter Anne Thackeray, the eldest daughter

  10. Jane Thackeray during her reading W.M. Thackeray in his study

  11. 1837-38 • The Yellowplush Correspondence in Fraser's. • 1839-40 • Catherine in Fraser's. • 1841 • The Great Hoggarty Diamond in Fraser's; 2-volume collection of Comic Tales and Sketches. • 1842 • First contribution to Punch. • 1843 • The Irish Sketch Book. • 1844 • The Luck of Barry Lyndon in Fraser's. Tour of Mediterranean and Mideast. • 1846 • Notes of a Journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo. Daughters join Thackeray in London. • 1846-47 • The Snobs of England (Punch), retitled The Book of Snobs in book form (1848). • 1847 • Punch's Prize Novelists (retitled Novels by Eminent Hands in book form, 1856). • 1847-48 • Vanity Fair (January 1847--July 1848). • 1848-50 • The History of Pendennis (November 1848--December 1850). • 1850 • Rebecca and Rowena. • 1851 • Lectures on humorists of eighteenth century in London (published as The English Humourists of the Eighteenth Century in 1853). • 1852 • The History of Henry Esmond. • 1855 • The Rose and the Ring. • 1855-1856 • Second American tour, lectures on the Hanoverian kings (published as The Four Georges in 1860). • 1857-59 • The Virginians (November 1857--October 1859). • 1860 • Lovel the Widower in Cornhill. • 1860-63 • Roundabout Papers in Cornhill. • 1863 • Begins Denis Duval (unfinished, published posthumously in Cornhill in 1864).

  12. Thackeray's first notable work was The Book of Snobs (1846-1847) which deals with the upper classes and their followers in the middle classes, whose vices the author criticizes with the sharp pen of satire. The Book of Snobs is a satirical description of different circles of English society in the century. The gallery of snobs in the book, Great City Snobs, The University Snobs and others, convinces the reader that 'snobbishness' was one of the most characteristic features of the ruling classes of England at that time.“The word Snob has taken a place in our honest English vocabulary. We can't define it, perhaps. We can't say what it is, any more than we can define wit, or humour, or humbug; but we know what it is.”“…A court system, that sends men of genius to the second table, I hold to be a Snobbish system. A society that sets up to be polite, and ignores Arts and Letters, I hold to be a Snobbish society.”

  13. A broad panorama of English life is given by Thackeray in three big novels: • 'Vanity Fair. A Novel Without a Hero" (1848), "The History of Pendennis" • (1850), and :'The Newcomes. Memoirs of a Most Respectable Family" (1855). • 'In "Vanity Fair" Thackeray's creative imagination is immense. He clearly • shows that the English society is nothing but a fair, buying and selling, which • dominates the lives of Thackeray's contemporaries. Thus, the author applies the • name of Vanity Fair to bourgeois-aristocratic England where everything can • be bought and sold. Thackeray's home where "Vanity Fair" was written.

  14. Rebecca Sharp and Joseph Sedley. (From the play "Vanity Fair" produced by the Moscow Maly Theatre.)

  15. Sir Pitt Crawley. (From the play "Vanity Fair" produced by the Moscow Maly Theatre.)

  16. George Osborne and Captain Dobbin. (From the play "Vanity Fair“ produced by the Mosco^ Maly Theatre.) Amelia and George. (From the play "Vanity Fair" produced by the Moscow Maly Theatre.)

  17. Thackeray on Society at Large • Thackeray divides society into 'rogues' and 'dupes'. The characters are different, but their fates have much in common. They are victims of a society where evil rules the world. Shallow people . . . shallow lives . . . shallow interests .... The author compares his characters to puppets, and society as a whole to a puppet show. • "Ah! VanitasVanitatumlwhich of us is happy in this world? Which of us has his desire? or, having it, is satisfied?—come, children, let us shut up the box and the puppets, for our play is played out."

  18. We entered a new stage of development in our country. We know that we have a lot of rich people. But also we know how they had made their fortunes by organizing a bank or a company that sold land which did not exist. They had ruined and brought to death or to the hungry existing hundreds of families. «A fortune - a crime». There are progressive persons in our society who extremely disappointed when they heard of the false elections and saw the awful greed of the money-makers, the discrimination against foreign immigrants.

  19. We are shocked. When honest people, who are fighting for the truth, are killed 100 meters away from the Kremlin in the very center of Moscow. StasMarkelov and NastyaBaburova were murdered on the 19 th of January -this is eternal disgrace. They were remarkable for their fortitude. They never hesitated to take the wisest way and remain true to the principles of honour.

  20. Stas Markelov was a well-known human rights defender and antifascist. As a lawyer he protected the rights of eco-defenders, antifascists, Chechen refugees, victims of police tortures and many others whom our state failed to provide with defence or vice versa, violated their rights.

  21. Nastya Baburova, the journalist of "Novaya Gazeta", was also the activist of many street actions against illegal housing development.

  22. W.M. Thackeray, a leading representative of critical realism in XIX century English literature, was one of the greatest authors of the brilliant school of British novelists. • Pseudonyms: Charles James Yellowplush, Angelo Titmarsh, George Savage FitzBoodle

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