Charles Dickens's Great Expectations

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Harold Bloom, Sterling Professor of Humanities Harold Bloom
Infobase Publishing, 2010 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 197 pages
With Great Expectations, Dickens applied his bravura storytelling abilities to a familiar subject for a novelist: a young person's coming of age. Over the course of the novel, Pip struggles to define himself and to make his way through a world populated by escaped convicts, cruel guardians, and the unforgettable Miss Havisham, the jilted bride trapped in the disappointments and regrets of the past. Introduced by esteemed critic Harold Bloom, this new edition offers a selection of full-length critical essays on Dickens's classic exploration of identity and belonging. Pip is the most inward of all Dickens's major character, and except for Esther Summerson in Bleak House, he also appears to be the Dickens protagonist most overtly affected by his own pathos. In Particular, he has a tendency to feel excessively guilly, almost in the Kafkan mode.---Harold Bloom. By the end of Great Expectations, it may even be unclear whether it is Biddy or Estella who has all along been the most conventional mate for Pip, so plausible do both options appear. Dickens skillfully throws the conventional ending into question by explicitly including it while showing that it functions as only one alternative among several.---Caroline Levine. Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations, a series of more than 100 volumes, presents the best current criticism on the most widely read and studied poems, novels, and dramas of the Western world, from Oedipus Rex and The Iliad to such modern and contemporary works as William Faulkner's the Sound and the Fury and Don DeLillo's White Noise. Each volume opens with an introductory essay and editor's note by Harold Bloom and includes a bibliography, a chronology of the writer's life and works, and notes on the contributors. Taken together, Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations provides a comprehensive critical guide to the most vital and influential works of the Western literary tradition.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Estellas Parentage and Pips Persistence by Stanley Friedman
3
Pip and Property by Gail Turley Houston
15
Christian Allusion Comedic Structure by John Cunningham
29
Listening to Estella by Margaret Flanders Darby
45
The Good and the Unruly by Robert R Garnett
61
The Burning of Miss Havisham by Sara Thornton
79
Realism as SelfForgetfulness by Caroline Levine
99
Absolute Equality by Stewart Justman
131
Great Expectations by Andrew Sanders
157
Chronology
169
Contributors
173
Bibliography
175
Acknowledgments
179
Index
181
Copyright

The Prince of the Marshes by Wendy S Jacobson
115

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About the author (2010)

Harold Bloom was born on July 11, 1930 in New York City. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from Cornell in 1951 and his Doctorate from Yale in 1955. After graduating from Yale, Bloom remained there as a teacher, and was made Sterling Professor of Humanities in 1983. Bloom's theories have changed the way that critics think of literary tradition and has also focused his attentions on history and the Bible. He has written over twenty books and edited countless others. He is one of the most famous critics in the world and considered an expert in many fields. In 2010 he became a founding patron of Ralston College, a new institution in Savannah, Georgia, that focuses on primary texts. His works include Fallen Angels, Till I End My Song: A Gathering of Last Poems, Anatomy of Influence: Literature as a Way of Life and The Shadow of a Great Rock: A Literary Appreciation of The King James Bible. Harold Bloom passed away on October 14, 2019 in New Haven, at the age of 89.

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