"Victorian era and fact vs fancy in hard times" Essays and Research Papers

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    Hard Times Bounderby

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    Josiah Bounderby falsely claims his success in life was a result of his hard work and never receiving help from anyone in Charles Dickens’ Hard Times. Claiming to be a self-made man grants Mr. Bounderby wide admiration in Coketown‚ with the exception of Tom and Louisa Gradgrind and Mrs. Sparsit‚ who perceive him to be an insolent person. Tom mirrors  Mr. Bounderby’s selfish and hypocritical personality‚ but blames the old man for his rigid upbringing. Louisa cannot admire Mr. Bounderby while he shamelessly

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    Hard Times: Coketown

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    In " Hard Times: Coketown" Charles Dickens is assessing industrialization and the effect it had on the people in the towns in which they resided. Coketown seems to be portrayed as a city of work and not anything else. It is put across that the town consists of only fact and nothing else to alleviate the dullness. Charles Dickens is sharing his analysis on the social issues implicated in this town through a narrative that reflects upon the environment. He uses a lot of descriptions and similes to

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    Case Hard Times

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    Case study “Hard Times” 1. SUMMARY It was a difficult time for the company‚ nobody wanted to buy advertising space. Even the telesales team leader Rob Grewal was finding it difficult to close more than one or two deals a week. It was the worst time for young Duncan Black to join the department – particularly since it was his first job. But once time he closed a deal in Bluebird`s most prestigious publication with Paxham’s Menswear. Many were unhappy because everyone of salespersons has tried to

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    Hard Times Analysis

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    Hard Times It is obvious that Charles Dickens is trying to express his negative feelings towards the industrial revolution by describing the town the way he does. He uses a large amount of figures of speeches and metaphors to indirectly describe the depressing look of Coketown and the people that inhabit it. The name of the town itself says a lot about it. “Coketown” can also be portrayed as a town dominated by slums and criminals. “It was a town of machinery and tall chimneys‚ out of which interminable

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    Surviving the hard times

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    Case Study – Surviving the Hard Time The case study “Surviving the Hard Times” is about a landscaping company that undergoes an economic hardship‚ and is kept together because of the culture that was cultivated producing loyal‚ hard working‚ employees. The organizational culture at Green Thumb Nursery is one that is people. According to Robbins and Judge Green Thumb Nursery is a people orientated business. Management decisions about schedules and work hours take into consideration the effect

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    Hard Times Symbolism‚ Imagery & Allegory Sometimes‚ there’s more to Lit than meets the eye. Fairy Palaces and Elephants (a.k.a. Factories and the Machinery inside them) This one is from the narrator and runs throughout the novel: the idea that the ugly‚ square‚ fact-based‚ oppressive mills look like fairy palaces with elephants in them when they are lit up at night. The image first pops up as something a person riding by Coketown in a fast-moving train might say – in other words‚ someone who

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    Dickens, Hard Times

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    Dickens‚ Hard times The novel Hard Times by Charles Dickens presents the use of “flat or two-dimensional” characters which ultimately signifies a character that is lacking depth in their character and essentially maintains the same character portrayal throughout the novel. Dickens portrays this through the use of placing his characters’ names with their dominant personality trait. For example the character of Bounderby who is identified as a banker in the novel; by definition means “a morally reprehensible

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    TOPIC:-What is Moral Fable? How can you say that Hard Times is a Moral Fable? BY: CHETAN ANKUR Moral fable combines the left (logical) & right (creative) side of the brain‚ so it both entertains creatively and validates certain types of behaviour‚ morally. The creative part is the fairy tale which often involves animals rather than humans. It speaks to our hearts as it entertains us; the ending is the logical‚ moral conclusion that satisfies our logical

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    Hard Times: Struggle of Fact vs Imagination and Struggle Between Two Classes Charles Dickens’ novel‚ Hard Times‚ is a story of two struggles--the struggle of fact versus imagination and the struggle between two classes. It takes place in Coketown‚ and industrial-age English city. The novel is divided into two sections. One deals with the struggle of upper class members of society and their struggle to learn the value of imagination. The other involves a working class man who is trapped

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    The Worst Hard Time

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    One theory in Jared Diamond s Collapse is that soil degradation and erosion leads to insufficient agriculture and a society s demise. In Timothy Egan s The Worst Hard Time‚ he sets forth in specific and excruciating detail exactly what Diamond outlines in Collapse. Only Egan s book isn t theoretical. It isn t a survey of what s happened in other countries. It s about the Dust Bowl in the 1930s. It s about what happens‚ right here in the heart of America‚ when the land is misused‚ mistreated‚ and

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