Great Expectations

Front Cover
Ignatius Press, Aug 6, 2010 - Fiction - 680 pages

Contributors to this volume:
Raimund Borgmeier
Crystal Downing
Anthony Esolen
Michael Hanke
Mitchell Kalpakgian
Jill Kriegel
Robert P. Lewis
Regis Martin

Pope John Paul II described Dickens' books as ""filled with love for the poor and a sense of social regeneration . . . warm with imagination and humanity"". Such true charity permeates Dickens' novels and ultimately drives the characters either to choose regeneration or risk disintegration. In Great Expectations, Pip-symbolic of the pilgrim convert-gains both improved fortunes and a growth in wisdom, but as he acquires the latter, he must relinquish the former-ending with a wealth of profound goodness, not of worldly goods.

That the Dickensian message was a Christian one is unmistakable. Reminiscent of an Augustinian model, one of reflection, conversion, and moral improvement, Pip undergoes an internal change that manifests itself in his profound contrition for his earlier deeds and his equally profound resolution to make amends. As we travel with Pip, we find that Dickens leads us to an acceptance of worldly limitations and an anticipation of final salvation.

The exciting new edition of Dickens's classic novel includes critical essays by some of today's leading Dickens scholars.

The Ignatius Critical Editions represent a tradition-oriented alternative to popular textbook series such as the Norton Critical Editions or Oxford World Classics, and are designed to concentrate on traditional readings of the Classics of world literature. While many modern critical editions have succumbed to the fads of modernism and post-modernism, this series will concentrate on tradition-oriented criticism of these great works.
Edited by acclaimed literary biographer, Joseph Pearce, the Ignatius Critical Editions will ensure that traditional moral readings of the works are given prominence, instead of the feminist, or deconstructionist readings that often proliferate in other series of 'critical editions'. As such, they represent a genuine extension of consumer-choice, enabling educators, students and lovers of good literature to buy editions of classic literary works without having to 'buy into' the ideologies of secular fundamentalism.
The series is ideal for anyone wishing to understand great works of western civilization, enabling the modern reader to enjoy these classics in the company of some of the finest literature professors alive today.

 

Contents

Introduction by Jill Kriegel
AppendixThe Original Ending to Great Expectations
Finding Satisfaction in Great Expectations
The Greatness of Gratitude
Pips Progress
Pips Pilgrimage
Copyright

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About the author (2010)

 Jill Kriegel, English Department Chair at St. Joseph’s Catholic School in Greenville, SC, earned her Ph.D. at Florida Atlantic University. Her dissertation explores Augustinian echoes in the works of Charles Dickens. She has published in the Saint Austin Review, including essays on Chaucer, Shakespeare, Charlotte Brontë, and Dickens. Her essay, “Shakespeare’s Friar Laurence: Romeo and Juliet’s Near-Tragic Hero and a Case Against Natural Magic”, appeared in LOGOS: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture. A slightly amended version of this essay appears also in the Ignatius Critical Edition of Romeo and Juliet.

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