This contribution examines the role of shame in Pip’s attempt to rise to the status of gentleman. Since in Victorian culture the term “gentleman” applies not only to the moral sphere, but also to the economic one and that of manners, the two different meanings of shame – as social and moral emotion – in this novel are interdependent. In the social sense, shame allows the reader to evaluate the protagonist’s actions, while in the moral one it explains his unsuccessful Bildung in terms of the loss of dignity and self-respect. Pip’s attempts to get rid of his commonness to become worthy of Estella, indeed, result in his feeling ashamed of his two paternal figures, models of that gentility that he will not be able to achieve. On the structural...
Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations is a perpetually repetitive sequence of abjection, mastery, and...
In this paper, I explore the experience of shame and its connections to recognition and love as mani...
This dissertation argues that the British novel was shaped to a large and as yet unexplored extent b...
This contribution examines the role of shame in Pip’s attempt to rise to the status of gentleman. Si...
This contribution examines the role of shame in Pip’s attempt to rise to the status of gentleman. Si...
The research discusses guilt and shame as reflected in Charles Dickens’s novel, Great Expectat...
Kipps(1905) by Herbert George Wells establishes an ambiguous relationship with the nineteenth-centur...
Kipps(1905) by Herbert George Wells establishes an ambiguous relationship with the nineteenth-centur...
This paper argues that as a particularly gendered affect in 19th century American context, shame pla...
Charles Dickens’ novels mirror his age. His purpose was to focus attention on the various evils of h...
Abstract This thesis looks at how shame is depicted in James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room. In doing so,...
Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens, is considered to be one of the principal examples of the ge...
analysts and psychotherapists. Perhaps no other American novel lends itself so well to an exploratio...
Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations is a perpetually repetitive sequence of abjection, mastery, and...
The goal of this work is to analyse the concept of gentlemanliness in Dickens's novel Great Expectat...
Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations is a perpetually repetitive sequence of abjection, mastery, and...
In this paper, I explore the experience of shame and its connections to recognition and love as mani...
This dissertation argues that the British novel was shaped to a large and as yet unexplored extent b...
This contribution examines the role of shame in Pip’s attempt to rise to the status of gentleman. Si...
This contribution examines the role of shame in Pip’s attempt to rise to the status of gentleman. Si...
The research discusses guilt and shame as reflected in Charles Dickens’s novel, Great Expectat...
Kipps(1905) by Herbert George Wells establishes an ambiguous relationship with the nineteenth-centur...
Kipps(1905) by Herbert George Wells establishes an ambiguous relationship with the nineteenth-centur...
This paper argues that as a particularly gendered affect in 19th century American context, shame pla...
Charles Dickens’ novels mirror his age. His purpose was to focus attention on the various evils of h...
Abstract This thesis looks at how shame is depicted in James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room. In doing so,...
Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens, is considered to be one of the principal examples of the ge...
analysts and psychotherapists. Perhaps no other American novel lends itself so well to an exploratio...
Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations is a perpetually repetitive sequence of abjection, mastery, and...
The goal of this work is to analyse the concept of gentlemanliness in Dickens's novel Great Expectat...
Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations is a perpetually repetitive sequence of abjection, mastery, and...
In this paper, I explore the experience of shame and its connections to recognition and love as mani...
This dissertation argues that the British novel was shaped to a large and as yet unexplored extent b...