Household Words Essays

  • Household Words, by Charles Dickens

    1077 Words  | 3 Pages

    that have in modern times been compiled into united novels. A particularly popular one of these periodicals was Household Words beginning at the second half of the nineteenth century. Household Words was one of the most popular periodicals of its time and came to be a place, along with its latter replacement All the Year Round, to find the best up-and-coming literary works. Household Words was edited by the already famous Charles Dickens (The Guardian), which only added to the periodical’s appeal,

  • F. R Leavis 'Chapter 5, Found': Chapter Summary

    1288 Words  | 3 Pages

    the ‘real’ condition of England. (Simmons, 2002, p.336). This brings together the idea of Mr. Grandgrind’s bafflement of why people needed to read fiction rather than knowledgeable books like mathematics, and Dickens’ approach into bringing Household Words to the attention to the middle and upper classes. Back in the nineteenth century the novel was considered as a contemporary, not far from the truth as Dickens was a contemporary writer. Not only did he write novels, he wrote articles for

  • Hard Times Literary Essay

    786 Words  | 2 Pages

    in his novel Hard Times as he attempts to bring to light social issues such as class division, education, and industrialization in nineteen-century English society. Hard Times was originally published in weekly segments in Dickens’ magazine, Household Words, from April 1854 to August 1854 (Cody 1). In order to better fit into the Libraries at the time, Charles Dickens divided Hard Times into three books: Sowing, Reaping, and Garnering. Each book with its own theme, guides us through the lives of

  • Stephen Blackpool in Charles Dickens' Hard Times

    1691 Words  | 4 Pages

    The book Hard Times is a book written by Charles Dickens a man that Dickens described as a man with great integrity, is introduced in this book his name is Stephen Blackpool. Stephen Blackpool lives in the town of Coketown Dickens describes this town: “In the innermost fortification of that ugly citadel where nature was as strongly bricked out as killing airs and gases were bricked in”. I think most people would agree that this is not a nice place to live in and it does not bring a nice

  • Hard Times – Charles Dickens

    1744 Words  | 4 Pages

    My first extract is “Murdering the innocents”. Life was very difficult for the poor in the Victorian times. It was very different depending on your class. Dickens used the novels to put across his opinion about the poor peoples hard lives. For example there were no laws about how long people could work; this had an effect on the amount of machinery – related accidents that happened in the Victorian era. Many children were working too long resulting in injury and death. Those children who were luckier

  • Charles Dickens' Hard Times and David Lodge's Nice Work

    2458 Words  | 5 Pages

    Charles Dickens' Hard Times and David Lodge's Nice Work ----“Fact, fact, fact, everywhere in the material aspect of the town; fact, fact, fact everywhere in the immaterial.” – Charles Dickens In the early 1851, London staged the Great Exhibition to show the world, the achievements and inventions of the Industrial Revolution. Many people believed that this showed how much better, safer and healthier Britain was than its neighbours in Europe. People living in mansions amid lawns and fountains

  • The Role of the Circus Folk in 'Hard Times' by Charles Dickens

    1602 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Role of the Circus Folk in 'Hard Times' by Charles Dickens The role of the circus is both complex and simple it is in itself a contradiction; it has been placed within the novel to add another dimension to the story of Coketown but also to show how fragile human nature can be. The circus folks role are complicated in their simplicity, they are of course there to carry out the role that they are paid to perform as actors or performers as well as being there for the second more complicated

  • North and South and Hard Times

    3011 Words  | 7 Pages

    North and South and Hard Times In  "Industrial" H Sussman states that "one of the most significant shifts created  by industrialism" was that of the "separation of the workplace from the home".  This "shift" created "new gender roles" with the "husband as breadwinner [and  the] wife as childcare giver" and led ultimately to the "19th century  ideology of the two separate spheres -  the masculine public sphere of work [and]  the private female sphere of domesticity". Is, however, this

  • The Importance of Sleary's Circus People in Hard Times

    711 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Importance of Sleary's Circus People in Hard Times In Charles Dickens' novel "Hard Times", an alternative view of the Gradgrind-Bounderby way of life is presented by Sleary's circus people. Sleary's people are shown by Dickens as leading lives which go against everything which Gradgrind represents and as such they are at first a kind of abomination to him. They are shown as people with a life of freedom, not constrained by the rigid set laws and hard facts which Gradgrind's philosophy

  • Gender Roles in Classical Greece

    1443 Words  | 3 Pages

    destroy the success of the oikos (the household) and the male’s reputation—two of the most important facets of Athenian life. The key to a thriving oikos and an unblemished reputation was a good wife who would efficiently and profitably run the household. It was the male’s role, however, to ensure excellent household management by molding a young woman into a good wife. Women were expected to enter the marriage as a symbolically empty vessel; in other words, a naïve, uneducated virgin of about

  • The Radio: Past and Present

    880 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Radio: Past and Present “He shoots!!! He scores!!!” these are famous words that Foster Hewitt made famous broadcasting a hockey game on the radio (“The Early Years”). It was words like these that the public became used to because there was no television. The radio served as the first medium to hear things live as they happened. This gave sport fans the opportunity to sit down and tune into a game anytime they like. The radio started off big and then took a dramatic fall due to the introduction

  • The Importance Of Women In The Hebrew Bible

    2675 Words  | 6 Pages

    birth. A boy would’ve been preferred in order to continue her husband’s name. Children were taught by their mothers’ the required technical skills needed to participate in and eventually take over the productive and processing tasks of the family household. If a wife couldn’t conceive, she would give the family’s slave to her husband and any offspring would give the wife the ... ... middle of paper ... ...re involved in the male’s productive task. It was the mother’s role to teach her children

  • Charles Dickens' Hard Times

    1751 Words  | 4 Pages

    a weekly journal, Household Words, which Dickens edited. Some people believe that Dickens “was determined to create a means where he could communicate his ideas on social reform so in 1850 he began editing Household Words” (Ford 16). One author states that “by 1851 the twenty-four page Household Words was selling 40,000 copies a week” (Gray 2). The weekly journal included articles on politics, science and history. To increase the number of people willing to buy Household Words, it also contained

  • Poverty In America Essay

    1034 Words  | 3 Pages

    in 2002, a small increase from the preceding year. To understand poverty in America, it is important to look behind these numbers--to look at the actual living conditions of the individuals the government deems to be poor. For most Americans, the word "poverty" suggests destitution: an inability to provide a family with nutritious food, clothing, and reasonable shelter. But only a small number of the 35 million persons classified as "poor" by the Census Bureau fit that description. While real material

  • Mosquita Y Mari Theme

    895 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mosquita y Mari is a story that focuses on the relationship between two Chicana teen girls in East Los Angeles. Growing up in immigrant households Yolanda and Mari are expected to prioritize their families’ well-being. As the storyline progresses, unexpected feelings and desires for each other begin to surface. Pressures at home force them to choose between their obligations to family and the affection between them. While “Mosquita y Mari” explores changing identities and traditional ideas of family;

  • Muslim Girls

    688 Words  | 2 Pages

    girls are taught that their role as a female is to assist their mother with household chores and to serve the men. While her male siblings, who spend most of their time playing and walking around the village, are not expected to work around the house (Bringa 106). Muslim boys were given privileges because they were male. Muslim women usually did not leave the household for employment because they maintained the household agriculture, however they could sew and knit for other villagers. Women’s work

  • Argumentation on TANF a form of Medicaid

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    money they are given is not enough to support their families. I don’t agree with this policy implemented by Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. The government fails to realize they are misleading the household and the mind set of the family members living in the household. This realization leads me to ask the question, does welfare have a color? Has the welfare line become the modern day Mason Dixon line? I believe that welfare was promoted as a way to help families in crisis, but the

  • Paul, the Motherly Paterfamilias

    3393 Words  | 7 Pages

    his household (children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren were all under his omnipotent hand) did not end when they grew up, rather the paterfamilias controlled every aspect of their lives (from collecting their income to allowing their marriages) until his death. His reign extended over the whole of the domus ("household"), meaning that slaves were in a similar relationship. Children and slaves were both owned by the paterfamilias because "they are both born into their parents' household and

  • Robert and the Dog

    591 Words  | 2 Pages

    understand the character Robert, one must look a bit at his background. Ken Saro-Wiwa has left several clues in the text that can tell us a lot about this. Before Robert was employed by the young medical doctor, he had worked for several different households. It is indicated in the text that these had not been as pleasant a workplace as with the young doctor. It seems that Robert had been used to his employers' shouting and losing their tempers. And never calling him by his first name. Also the gratitude

  • Power for Women in Alcestis and Hippolytus

    1671 Words  | 4 Pages

    life for an honorable cause improve a woman’s reputation in turn giving her more power? Through our studies, we have discovered that typically women exhibit a limited amount of agency in ancient Greece. Women occasionally assert dominance in the household; although, even within the home they posses limited influence over their husbands. An interesting theme runs though Euripides theatrical tragedies Alcestis and Hippolytus. In each play the lead female character forgoes her life for the sake of