This dissertation attempts to trace hereditary motifs in the novels of Charles Dickens and to relate these motifs to broader concerns--specifically Dickens's depiction of the formation of the self, his understanding of history and of the role of time Towards this end, I offer an historical overview of scientific and popular thinking on heredity, and suggest how some of these notions were translated into Dickens's fiction. The discussion of hereditary themes in the novels falls into two broad categories--the private and the public.In the first of these, I argue that Dickens tended to define positive moral qualities, such as goodness, as hereditable. At the same time, he was reluctant to portray negative characteristics, such as criminality o...
Graduation date: 2000Presentation date: 1999-09-13Nineteenth-century England witnessed burgeoning ur...
This essay focuses upon one particularly rich strategy through which Charles Dickens and his contemp...
Wealth and social status in Victorian England had a great influence on perceiving a person in nearly...
This dissertation examines how Charles Dickens’s last completed novels, which appeared after the pub...
This dissertation explores the subject of heredity and its novelistic treatment c. 1850-1900. Though...
The purpose of this thesis is to study working-class characters in Dickens's novels in relation to ...
In his novels Charles Dickens shows an abiding interest in the family, the child, and educational pr...
This thesis examines the main influences responsible for Charles Dickens's impassioned campaign on b...
The thesis examines certain aspects of Dickens's relationship to a number of his English Romantic pr...
This dissertation is an examination of particularity in Victorian fiction, biological science, and e...
This thesis employs a variety of theoretical approaches to examine the representation of children in...
grantor: University of TorontoDickens played a key role in establishing the fairy tale as ...
Animals appear in many guises in Charles Dickens’s novels, as wild animals, domestic animals, animal...
My thesis explores the maturation of the grotesque throughout Charles Dickens’s career. The main foc...
This thesis explores nineteenth-century British theatrical adaptations based on a selection of novel...
Graduation date: 2000Presentation date: 1999-09-13Nineteenth-century England witnessed burgeoning ur...
This essay focuses upon one particularly rich strategy through which Charles Dickens and his contemp...
Wealth and social status in Victorian England had a great influence on perceiving a person in nearly...
This dissertation examines how Charles Dickens’s last completed novels, which appeared after the pub...
This dissertation explores the subject of heredity and its novelistic treatment c. 1850-1900. Though...
The purpose of this thesis is to study working-class characters in Dickens's novels in relation to ...
In his novels Charles Dickens shows an abiding interest in the family, the child, and educational pr...
This thesis examines the main influences responsible for Charles Dickens's impassioned campaign on b...
The thesis examines certain aspects of Dickens's relationship to a number of his English Romantic pr...
This dissertation is an examination of particularity in Victorian fiction, biological science, and e...
This thesis employs a variety of theoretical approaches to examine the representation of children in...
grantor: University of TorontoDickens played a key role in establishing the fairy tale as ...
Animals appear in many guises in Charles Dickens’s novels, as wild animals, domestic animals, animal...
My thesis explores the maturation of the grotesque throughout Charles Dickens’s career. The main foc...
This thesis explores nineteenth-century British theatrical adaptations based on a selection of novel...
Graduation date: 2000Presentation date: 1999-09-13Nineteenth-century England witnessed burgeoning ur...
This essay focuses upon one particularly rich strategy through which Charles Dickens and his contemp...
Wealth and social status in Victorian England had a great influence on perceiving a person in nearly...