"Great expectations how does the relationship between pip and joe change and develop as the novel goes on" Essays and Research Papers

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    How Does Pip Present Joe

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    The most significant and important relationship in Pip’s life so far has been Joe. Throughout Pip’s life he has been able to have Joe. Joe has been Pip’s best friend his whole life. When Joe is first introduced to the readers on page 8‚ he is perceived immediately as having a calm‚ easy going attitude. Even though they are not related by blood‚ Joe treats Pip as part of his own family. It’s fortunate that Pip was able to have Joe in his life as he grew up and not just his sister. Joe’s calm demeanor

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    The novelGreat Expectations”‚ by Charles Dickens shows how a young‚ simplistic boy grows into a gentleman‚ and slowly but surely discovers that no matter what happens in his life‚ he can’t change who he is on the inside. Pip goes through a great deal of hardships throughout the beginning of the book. Pip is hardly aware of his social and educational condition‚ but everything changes when he is exposed to the life of the rich at the Satis House. Pip moves to London due to the generosity of a benefactor

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    In Great ExpectationsPip goes through stages of moral maturity. Over the course of the novelPip learns lifelong lessons that result from pain‚ guilt‚ and shame. Pip evolves from a young boy filled with shame and guilt to a selfish‚ young man‚ and finally into a man who has true concern for others. Pip goes through three stages in the novel; shame and guilt‚ self-gratification‚ and his stage of redemption. The first stage of Pip’s maturity is his shame and guilt. Shame is a feeling brought

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    parents. This is true of Pip because his parents died when he was young and his sister and her husband‚ Joe‚ raised him. Although they raised Pip‚ Mrs. Joe and Joe did not fit the role of parental figures in Pip’s life. His sister was not a mother figure because she did not show love or affection as she was constantly beating him and telling him that he ruined her life. Joe‚ although loving‚ was not a father figure because he and Pip did not have a father-son relationship but rather a friendship

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    As a young child‚ the orphan Pip lives with his sister and brother-in-law‚ the village blacksmith. On Christmas Eve‚ Pip is walking through the marshes when he meets an escaped convict who threatens him into bringing back food and a file to break the leg-irons. On Christmas Day‚ the convict is captured and returned to the prison ships known as The Hulks. He never reveals Pip’s assistance when he is caught and asked how he escaped his irons. Much later‚ young Pip is sent to entertain Miss Havisham

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    Pips Expectations

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    Stage Two Pips Expectations Pip goes to London to start his new life and to live his dreams of being educated and wealthy. When Pip arrives‚ Mr. Jaggers shows him where he will be staying and gives him a tour around town. He begins to have less and less time for other people outside of his little circle but when he arrives he begins to meet new people. He first meets a man named Herbert Pocket‚ who is related to Miss Havisham. He tells Pip about her past and why she is the way she is now. He tells

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    How does Dickens create sympathy for Pip? ‘Great expectations’ is a novel written during and set in the Victorian era‚ a time in which status‚ class and money were extremely important and where a discrepancy between the rich and poor was evident. The novel follows the ill-fated life of the protagonist in the novel‚ ‘Pip’. Dickens writes in such a way that each character is a subject of either sympathy or scorn. Dickens implies that Pip is a subject of sympathy through his use of guilt and

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    In the movie Great Expectations‚ there are many positive characters but one who really stands out to me is Joe Gargery. Joe is a very hardworking man who provides for his wife and Pip. Even though Joe is not Pips father‚ he is the only fatherly figure Pip has ever known. Joe is a blacksmith and he teaches Pip how to be a blacksmith because one day he is expected to do the same. Joe Gargery is a positive light in the movie because the actions he has chosen to do. Joe did not have to step up to be

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    In this literary study‚ the theme of identity will be examined in a character analysis of Pip in "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens. In the novelPip is a young man who is the narrator and the main character used to define identity. Pip is a confused character constantly seeking his own identity‚ but he can never seem to understand who he is or where he is going in life. At times‚ Pip is uncertain of neither his own identity nor what he wants out of life. The different stages of childhood‚

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    of Pip and Joe’s Relationship – How it Changes and Develops Joe is actually Pip’s brother-in-law and the village blacksmith. Joe stays with his overbearing‚ abusive wife—known as Mrs. Joe—solely out of love for Pip. Joe’s quiet goodness makes him one of the few completely sympathetic characters in Great Expectations. Although he is uneducated and unrefined‚ he consistently acts for the benefit of those he loves and suffers in silence when Pip treats him coldly. From the start of Great Expectations

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