Papers on ""Great Expectations"" and similar term paper topics
Paper #062288 ::
"Great Expectations"
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This paper describes destructive women characters in Charles Dickens "Great Expectations".
Written in 2005; 1,045 words; 1 source; MLA;
$ 36.95
Paper Summary:
This paper explains that, in "Great Expectations", Charles Dickens, notorious for his social commentaries and criticisms on the Victorian life, focuses on the importance of the traditional roles of women by emphasizing what happens when these traditional roles become altered. The author points out that, by including destructive women in his novel, Dickens is reinforcing the importance of Victorian patriarchy and domesticity. The paper describes three destructive women from the novel: Mrs. Gragery, who is not a good mother and is indignant in her responsibilities: Miss Havisham, who is not only self-destructive but also destroys Estelle with her upbringing and Estelle, who is destructive in practically every relationship with men.
From the Paper:
"Mrs. Gragery is the first woman we encounter that possesses a destructive personality. She does not see motherhood as anything she should enjoy. In fact, she despises it. She tells Pip, "I'd never do it again! I know that. I may truly say I've never had this apron of mine off, since born you were. It's bad enough to be a blacksmith's wife, and him a Gragery, without being your mother" (Dickens 7). Here we see how she resents the responsibility of caring for her brother as well as her lot in life. We also read that she not only raised Pip by hand but that she also ruled Joe with her hand as well. We read that she was "much in the habit of laying it upon her husband as well as upon me, I suppose that Joe Gragery and I were both brought up by hand" (5). She is not happy being a housewife and she does not regard motherhood as a worthy responsibility. In fact, she seems to make Pip pay for the fact that she must raise him by wearing an apron that is "full of pins and needles" (6) so she is not easily accessible. Here we can see how Mrs. Gragery is many things, none of which resemble a traditional wife and mother. In the novel, she is maimed. With her character, Dickens is painting the portrait of a woman that has deliberately stepped outside her traditional role as wife and mother."
Tags:
commentaries traditional patriarchy domesticity motherhood
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