This study explores the theater actually known and frequented by Dickens in order to show in terms of concrete structural analysis of his novels the nature of the predominantly “dramatic” or “theatrical” quality of his genius. Author William F. Axton finds that the three principal dramatic modes or “voices” that were characteristically Victorian were burlesquerie, grotesquerie, and the melodramatic, and that the novelist’s vision of the world around him was drawn from ways of seeing transformed from those elements in the popular playhouse of his day—as revealed in the structure and theme of Sketches by Boz, Pickwick Papers, Oliver Twist, and other novels. The last half of the study analyzes representative passages from the novels to illustr...
BasingstokeThis chapter is concerned with the operation of the melodramatic mode within the classic...
This dissertation examines the ways in which melodramatic communication functions as a frequently-un...
Such has been Dickens’ popularity, that we see today evidence of the activity of his readers all aro...
In this study I have not been concerned with Charles Dickens as the man, or humorist, or novelist; b...
Examination of Oliver Twist, Nicholas Nickleby, Martin Chuzzlewit, David Copperfield, and Great Expe...
This thesis examines Dickens’s representation of cockney dialect and cockney speakers, as well as re...
This thesis explores nineteenth-century British theatrical adaptations based on a selection of novel...
Bibliography: p. B.1-5.This thesis takes as its point of departure the analysis of a certain formal ...
Because Charles Dickens' literature has become a part of popular culture, Lyn Pykett wrote that mode...
This thesis examines the relationship between Dickens's malefactors and the villains of nineteenth-c...
147 p. ; 23 cm. Includes bibliographical references. University of Kansas author
Charles Dickens’s work has been taken and adapted for many different ends. Quite a lot of attention ...
Recent studies have underlined the relevance of the Victorian Age (whose temporal boundaries have be...
In this essay, I discuss my use of Charles Dickens’s Sketches by Boz (1836-39) in my undergraduate V...
This thesis examines the various theatrical Oliver Twists that appeared on the nineteenth-century pa...
BasingstokeThis chapter is concerned with the operation of the melodramatic mode within the classic...
This dissertation examines the ways in which melodramatic communication functions as a frequently-un...
Such has been Dickens’ popularity, that we see today evidence of the activity of his readers all aro...
In this study I have not been concerned with Charles Dickens as the man, or humorist, or novelist; b...
Examination of Oliver Twist, Nicholas Nickleby, Martin Chuzzlewit, David Copperfield, and Great Expe...
This thesis examines Dickens’s representation of cockney dialect and cockney speakers, as well as re...
This thesis explores nineteenth-century British theatrical adaptations based on a selection of novel...
Bibliography: p. B.1-5.This thesis takes as its point of departure the analysis of a certain formal ...
Because Charles Dickens' literature has become a part of popular culture, Lyn Pykett wrote that mode...
This thesis examines the relationship between Dickens's malefactors and the villains of nineteenth-c...
147 p. ; 23 cm. Includes bibliographical references. University of Kansas author
Charles Dickens’s work has been taken and adapted for many different ends. Quite a lot of attention ...
Recent studies have underlined the relevance of the Victorian Age (whose temporal boundaries have be...
In this essay, I discuss my use of Charles Dickens’s Sketches by Boz (1836-39) in my undergraduate V...
This thesis examines the various theatrical Oliver Twists that appeared on the nineteenth-century pa...
BasingstokeThis chapter is concerned with the operation of the melodramatic mode within the classic...
This dissertation examines the ways in which melodramatic communication functions as a frequently-un...
Such has been Dickens’ popularity, that we see today evidence of the activity of his readers all aro...