Category: A Christmas Carol
-
A Christmas Carol’ Redemption Essay
A Christmas Carol follows the redemption of a rich and miserly character called Scrooge. He learns how important it is to be responsible for others in society. Dickens wrote the novella in 1843, just after the Poor Law Amendment Act which further worsened the conditions for those living in poverty. Victorian society was extremely religious…
-
A Christmas Carol’: Compare and Contrast Essay
In A Christmas Carol, Dickens presents the hope of redemption in the novel as a whole through the contrast and by using Scrooge from stave 1 to stave 5. At the start of the novella, we see how Scrooge has disconnected himself from society. He doesn’t allow Bob to heat the office by burning coal,…
-
The Significance Of Family In A Christmas Carol
A Christmas Carol is a didactic text in which Dickens presents family as incredibly important. Dickens own father was put in prison when he was a child, which had a profound effect on him. Scrooges personality at the start of the allegorical novella juxtaposes other characters as he rejects the possibility of having a family…
-
Scrooge as an Outsider in Charles Dickens’ ‘A Christmas Carol’: Character Analysis
This essay explores ideas on how Scrooge is presented as an outsider throughout the novella and will identify and analyze techniques used by Dickens. Dickens presents Scrooge as an outsider through his initial description of the character. External heat had little influence on Scrooge. The use of pathetic fallacy emphasizes the idea of Scrooge being…
-
Theme Of Actions And Consequences In A Christmas Carol
The important and lasting consequences that result from our action, for good or evil, is a key theme in the novel. For Jacob Marley, the actions he chose to carry out in life had enduring consequences. He was doomed to roam the earth in the chains he forged, desperately craving to help other but being…
-
Theme of the Supernatural in Charles Dickens’ Novella ‘A Christmas Carol’: Critical Essay
One of the key themes in the novella A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens is the theme of the supernatural because it symbolizes all the aspects and the allegories of the two social problems of life. One aspect of the theme supernatural that the writer focuses on occurs at the beginning of the novel. Stave…
-
The Ideas And Symbolism In Christmas Carol
It is a fair, even-handed, noble adjustment of things, that while there is infection in disease and sorrow, there is nothing in the world so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humour., is the original famous phrase said by Ebenezer Scrooge in a Christmas Carol by Charles Dicken. A Christmas Carol is a novella by…
-
The Portrayals Of The Ghosts In Christmas Carol
Dickens presents each of the four ghosts in very different ways as they contrast one another throughout the novel. He uses the views and reactions of the character Scrooge and the physical descriptions of the ghosts to portray their moral significance. The novel is split into five staves (or chapters) with the three ghosts of…
-
The Portrayals Of The Ghosts In Christmas Carol
Dickens presents each of the four ghosts in very different ways as they contrast one another throughout the novel. He uses the views and reactions of the character Scrooge and the physical descriptions of the ghosts to portray their moral significance. The novel is split into five staves (or chapters) with the three ghosts of…
-
Comparative Analysis of the Danger of Drug Addiction and Behavioral Addictions on the Examples of Famous Literary Heroes
People know quite a lot about addiction – not only about drug addiction and alcoholism, but also about bulimia, shopaholism and deceit. Cinematography is often referred to the topic of non-chemical dependencies: these topics are touched upon, for example, in Lars von Trier’s Nymphomaniac and Damien Chazelle’s Whiplash. However, in the classical literature, other types…