Thursday, January 23, 2020
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens :: Great Expectations Essays
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens    Coursework Question: In the extract where Pip, a boy from a very  humble background meets Miss Havisham, a rich but eccentric lady  dickens wants the reader to feel sympathetic towards Pip. How does he  make us feel this way?    In this assignment, I will analyse, discuss and comment on the  techniques Charles Dickens (Dickens) uses as a writer to gain sympathy  for the main character Pip. I will look closely at setting, language,  characterisation, the opening and closing of the extract. I will also  quote ideas and phrases from the text to help me analyse and explain.    Pip, the main character, is a lonely orphaned child. He lives with his  sister and her husband the blacksmith. We know that Pipââ¬â¢s family is  poor because they live of a blacksmith wages, not very much. The novel  is set in the Victorian era where social status played a major role in  daily life; we see this in the novel. Pipââ¬â¢s sister brought him up by  ââ¬Ëhandââ¬â¢ and finds he is a burden on her. Dickens chose to make the main  character, Pip, lonely and poor to gain our sympathy.    This novel is written in the voice first person, as if it were Pip  telling the story. Dickens wrote this novel from Pipââ¬â¢s point of view.  Pip is telling us the story when he is much older, as if he were  thinking back to when he was a child. The fact that Dickens chose to  make Pip, the main character, the narrator instead of another  character creates a bond between Pip and us, the readers.    In this extract Pip is sent by Mr Pumblechook, a distant relative, to  see Miss Havisham (Havisham). Mr Pumblechook is not of higher class,  but mingles well with them. Mr Pumblechook believes Havisham will  take to Pip like she took to Estella, which would secure Pipââ¬â¢s future.  Although another reason is that Pips sister finds he is a burden on  her and wouldnââ¬â¢t mind getting rid of him. Pip is warned to behave, as  Havisham is of higher social class and his sister doesnââ¬â¢t want him to  ruin his chances.    When Pip enters Havishamââ¬â¢s house we have hope for Pip that Havisham  will take to him like she did to Estella. Havisham, as she is of  higher, lives in a more lavish house than Pip. Dickens uses the  setting to gain sympathy and to keep us interested.    Pip enters a large room, he very observant. For example he mentions,  ââ¬Ëpretty large room, well lighted with wax candles.ââ¬â¢ The description  creates a mental image in our minds of where he is, immediately we    					    
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