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Parentage and Inheritance in the Novels of Charles Dickens Anny Sadrin

Parentage and Inheritance in the Novels of Charles Dickens By Anny Sadrin

Parentage and Inheritance in the Novels of Charles Dickens by Anny Sadrin


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Summary

Dickens's plots, often dismissed as conventional or cheaply sensational, are here considered as the embodiment of Dickens's preoccupation with rituals of succession. Sadrin shows how the simple pattern of quest for father develops in Dickens's later novels into an extended exploration of the triple inheritance of looks, name and property.

Parentage and Inheritance in the Novels of Charles Dickens Summary

Parentage and Inheritance in the Novels of Charles Dickens by Anny Sadrin

Dickens' plots have often been dismissed as conventional or cheaply sensational: Anny Sadrin argues that they should rather be seen as the embodiment of one of Dickens's central preoccupations: dramatised rituals of succession. Through readings of individual texts Professor Sadrin shows how the simple pattern of quest for father which characterises Oliver Twist develops in Dickens's later novels into an extended exploration of the triple inheritance of looks, name and property. Increasing intricacies of plot represent growing tension between conflicting forces in the parent-child relationship: the wish to belong and the wish to break free, the quest for identity and the fear of shameful identification, the filial piety of Telemachus and the patricidal yearnings of Oedipus. Throughout, Dickens is using plot to account for the complex process of reinstatement and revaluation which enables rightful heirs to take their rightful place in the family and society.

Table of Contents

Introduction: to have or not to be; 1. Parentage and inheritance: in the name of the father, mothers and daughters, fathers in heaven, sons on earth; 2. Domestic and national: Dickens and son, the holy family; 3. The parish boy's progress: a pilgrimage to origins; 4. The sons of Dombey: a daughter after all? The sons of Dombeyism; 5. Nemo's daughter and her inheritance of shame; 6. 'Nobody's fault' or the inheritance of guilt: nobody, everybody, somebody; 7. Dickens's disinherited boy and his great expectations: bastard or foundling? From tale to fable; 8. Inheritance or death: money and origins, death in effigy, the holy sacricifice, the alchemist; Conclusion: Oedipus or Telemachus?

Additional information

NLS9780521172325
9780521172325
0521172322
Parentage and Inheritance in the Novels of Charles Dickens by Anny Sadrin
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2010-12-09
184
N/A
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