Charles Dickens
Title: Charles Dickens
Category: /History
Details: Words: 2103 | Pages: 8 (approximately 235 words/page)
Charles Dickens
Category: /History
Details: Words: 2103 | Pages: 8 (approximately 235 words/page)
Charles Dickens
Dickens has always presented problems for literary criticism. For theorists whose critical presuppositions emphasize intelligence, sensitivity and an author in complete control of his work the cruder aspects of his popular art have often proved an insurmountable obstacle, while for the formulators of traditions his gigantic idiosyncrasies can never be made to conform. If difficulties such as these have been overcome by the awareness that Dickens sets his own standards, there remains a
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imagination and the extent of his vision. In that vision, in even the darkest of the novels, remained fundamentally comic, I suspect that, where criticism has found him wanting, it is often because comedy, of its nature, presents particular problems for the moral certitude which criticism tends to embody. This in itself is a measure of Dickens’s greatness: like all great artists he forces us to reconsider the attitudes which we bring to art.

