Great Expectations Vocabulary 1) Corroborated (vb) Supported or established by existing evidence. “The hue and cry going off to the Hulks‚ and people coming thence to examine the iron‚ Joe’s opinion was corroborated.” Pocket corroborated Pip’s suspicions that Estella had already taken a huband. Sagaciously (adv) Intelligently or wisely. “I sagaciously observed‚ if it didn’t signify to him‚ to whom did it signify?” Pip dozed off as Pumblechook sagaciously
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time it is an essential part of being successful in today’s society. In Great Expectations by Charles Dickens the main character Pip goes through some dramatic life changes over the course of his adolescence and young adulthood. He transforms from a poor boy living in the marshes of England to a London gentleman through a generous and anonymous benefactor. During his journey from lower to upper class‚ Pip’s great expectations shift with his circumstances and along with them‚ his behavior and attitude
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Title: Great Expectations Author: Charles Dickens Main Characters: Pip The main character‚ Estella The rich girl‚ Joe Pip’s uncle the blacksmith‚ Miss Havisham The rich old lady‚ Magwitch The convict and Pip’s benefactor Setting: Kent a town full of marshes by the river Point of View: Dialogue Theme(s): Becoming a gentleman and living in poverty‚ falling in love with a beautiful girl named Estella who is very rich. Summary: Pip is a young boy who lives in
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Great Expectations‚ by Charles Dickens‚ is about a boy’s journey from being a little boy trying to stay alive from a convict that would kill him if Pip did not bring him what the convict asked for. Pip gotten an opportunity to go with his sister’s husband‚ Joe‚ to Miss. Havisham and her ‘daughter’‚ Estella‚ and Pip falls in love with Estella. Pip got money from a benefactor but he thinks it was from Miss. Havisham but‚ when he went to London with the money. But‚ he learns that his benefactor was
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Imagery is a crucial device employed in literary texts that affects how readers interpret dominant ideologies of the society represented in the text. In the case of Great Expectations‚ Charles Dickens successfully enacts the stratified class structure and power relationship by employing imagery in the form of characterization‚ pathetic fallacy and figurative language. Through such imagery‚ the novel specifically conveys a critique of a society where capital indicates social position‚ where wealth
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Great Expectations is a coming of age novel. This novel is a story of Pip and his initial dreams and resulting disappointments that eventually lead him to becoming a genuinely good man. During his journey into adulthood‚ Pip comes to realize two diverse concepts of being a gentleman and he comes to find the real gentlemen in his life aren’t the people he had thought. Encouraged by Mrs. Joe and Pumblechook‚ as a child Pip entertains fantasies of becoming a gentleman. In the eyes of Pip a
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Dictionary of Narratology Terms for Charles Dickens’ ‘Great Expectations’ Narratology- The branch of literary criticism that deals with the structure and function of narrative themes‚ conventions‚ and symbols. A term used since 1969 to denote the branch of literary study devoted to the analysis of narratives‚ and more specifically of forms of narration and varieties of narrator. Narratology as a modern theory is associated chiefly with European structuralism‚ although older studies of narrative
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In the novel Great Expectations which is written by Charles Dickens‚ and the play Macbeth which is written by Shakespeare the themes portrayed are very similar especially between the two leading characters‚ Macbeth who starts of the play as the Thane of Cawdor and Pip who starts of the novel as a blacksmith son from Great Expectations. Macbeth and Pip both ambitious people and strive have higher in status and are will stop at nothing to achieve that goal. In both Great expectations and Macbeth they
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term that in 1800s London was a word that defined everyone. It defined people‚ the way they lived‚ and the way people saw others. If people were not rich and treated respectfully‚ they were poor and treated as peasant-like and a hinderance. Great Expectations is a novel by Charles Dickens about a boy named Phillip Pirrip overcoming social status. This shows that no one’s class or social standing is set from birth. Charles Dicken’s novel uses motifs‚ themes‚ and imagery to make this point clear to
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The book Great Expectations is filled with foils and "opposites"‚ characters that bring out characteristics important to the theme of the novel. One of the biggest foils is Compeyson and Magwitch. Compeyson is a rich "gentleman" and is let off pretty easily from a long ‚ hard sentence‚ while Magwitch‚ a poor‚ unsuccessful orphan‚ is not pitied by society. He is labeled a convict and framed by Compeyson. He takes the blame for everything bad Compeyson has done and comes off as a shady‚ dodgy person
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