The novel 'Hard Times' is set in the nineteenth century. It was a time where education did not have the developments as we have nowadays. It was not compulsory for all ages and it was offered to the wealthier, more than the working class who did go to school, but the need of children working was more important, in the eyes of some people.
In this essay I am going to explore the representation of education of that era, how Charles Dickens portrays it, and what part it played in the characters lives. Can education mould you into who you are?
Hard Times is set in an industrial fictional town called Coketown, in the North of England.
Dickens represents education as an important factor of life; what you learn as a child, lives through you, to the day you die. It's hard to change habits you develop in your youth.
"Now what I want is facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but facts" states Gradgrind. It makes you realise what kind of way the pupils were taught, in the nineteenth century.
Learning was so cold, strict and harsh. Facts were important, always having the correct answer; the answer that teachers wanted to hear was the only way.
"Plant nothing else and root out every thing else. You can form the minds of reasoning animals upon Facts; nothing else will ever be of service to them, "Gradgrind stresses. The sentences make you realise what kind of way the pupils were encouraged to be taught. They would be given the basic needs like a plant requires water, sun and nutrition, but what about