Saturday, June 1, 2019

Society’s Attitude Towards Under Privileged Children in the Novel Olive

Societys Attitude Towards Under Privileged Children in the Novel Oliver TwistOliver Twist is superstar of Charles daimon most enduringly popularnovels. Best known for his host of distinctively cruel, comic andrepugnant characters, Charles Dickens remains the most widely ingest ofthe Victorian novelists. Oliver Twist, a meek, mild young boy, isborn in the workhouse and spends his early years there until, findingthe audacity to ask for more food, Please, sir, I want some more. heis made to leave. Oliver represents the underprivileged children inthis novel. Dickens shows us societys attitude towards Oliver and theunder privileged children, they were abused, beaten and brought up byhand. Oliver Twist is a criticism of the workhouses, the judicialsystem and the criminal world of capital of the United Kingdom society of the time. Dickensuse of satire and descriptive agency conveys the pain of theunfortunate to the reader. His narrative skills be loaded with bitingsarcasm and irony mak ing the novel a chilling revelation of the breedingof the orphans.Dickens was a lifelong champion of the execrable. He himself suffered theharsh abuse visited upon the poor by the English legal system, as hehimself was an orphan. In England in the 1830s, the poor had no voice,political or economically. In Oliver Twist, he presents the everydayexistence of the lowest characters of English society. He goes farbeyond the experiences of the workhouse, extending his depiction ofpoverty to Londons squalid streets, dark alehouses, and thievesdens, he gives voice to those who had no voice, showing us a linkbetween politics and literature with his language techniques and mixer commentary. The novel is that of a young individual boy but t... ...y to make us visualize the19th century London.Characters such as Mr.Brownlow, Nancy, Ms. Rose, all give repose toOlivers life but filthy characters such Fagin and Sikes never allowOliver to be in peace.Dickens shows us how society can change the li fe of a person. Thedifferent classes of society all have good and bad. But in the end weknow that good prevails over evil. The novel has made me assure thatI can survive under any circumstances if I keep hope and keep prayinglike Oliver did, have more faith. The novel overly inspires me as goodprevails over evil and always will. The novel is also an eye openerfor me as it teaches me to appreciate the comforts of my life as Ihave a home to live in, love from my parents, food to eat everyday andit teaches me to be more understanding and gentle towards youngerpeople who are less fortunate than me.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.