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Childhood in Victorian England and Charles Dickens' novel "Oliver Twist" close

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Childhood in Victorian England and Charles Dickens' novel "Oliver Twist"

Termpaper, 2002, 19 Pages
Author: Sirinya Pakditawan
Subject: English Language and Literature Studies - Literature

Details

Category: Termpaper
Year: 2002
Pages: 19
Grade: 1,5
Bibliography: ~ 16  Entries
Language: English
Archive No.: V59347
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-53313-3
ISBN (Book): 978-3-638-77572-4
File size: 252 KB

Abstract

In "Oliver Twist", Dickens presents the everyday existence of the lowest members of English society and realistically portrays the horrible conditions of the nineteenth century workhouses. Hence, in the story of Oliver Twist, Dickens uses past experiences from his childhood and targets the Poor Law of 1834 which renewed the importance of the workhouse as a means of relief for the poor. In fact, Dickens’ age was a period of industrial development marked by the rise of the middle class. In the elections brought about by the accession of William IV in 1830, the Tories lost control of the government. Assumption of power by the Whigs opened the way to an era of accelerated progress. In this time period, children worked just as much, if not more, than some of the adults. After 1833, an increased amount of legislation was enacted to control the hours of labour and working conditions for children and women in manufacturing plants. The Poor Law of 1834 wanted to make the workhouse more of a deterrent to idleness as it was believed that people were poor because they were lazy and needed to be punished. So people in workhouses were deliberately treated harshly and the workhouses were similar to prisons. In the following, it will be analyzed how Dickens attacks the defects of existing institutions in his novel "Oliver Twist". Hence, it will be shown how Dickens creates a fictive world that was a mirror in which the truths of the real world were reflected. However, firstly, it is necessary to take a closer look at the historical background. Thus, the attitude of Victorian society towards the poor comes into view and with it the central issues of child labour, Poor Laws and workhouse conditions. Secondly, when regarding the central theme of child labour in "Oliver Twist", one must also be aware of Dickens’ childhood and social background, "Oliver Twist" being partly an autobiographic novel.


Excerpt (computer-generated)

Childhood in Victorian England and Charles Dickens′ novel "Oliver Twist"

by: Sirinya Pakditawan

 


Content

0. Introduction ...3

1. Victorian Morals and the Poor ...6

1.1. Poor Laws and Workhouses ...6
1.2. Child Labour ...9

2. Dickens’ Childhood and Background ...13

3. Cold Reality of Workhouses: Oliver Twist’s Social Commentary ...15

4. Conclusion ...17

Literature ...19
 


 

0. Introduction

Have you ever thought about how it would be to live in a time of poverty? How would life be if you were poor and did not know from where you would be getting your next meal? What would it be like to be forced to live in a workhouse? These are some crucial questions you might ask yourself if you were living in early nineteenth century England. Charles Dickens, who was a lifelong champion of the poor,1 addresses these central issues in his early novel and timeless masterpiece Oliver Twist (1838).

Dickens himself suffered the harsh abuse visited upon the poor by the English legal system. In England in the 1830s, the poor truly had no voice, political or economic. In particular, children were often mistreated and subjected to the poorest of working and living conditions. In point of fact, the Victorian Era was characterized by the use of children to help develop the economy. Child labourers received less than the essentials needed at home, school, and at work. In a nutshell, the life of a young worker was in essence the life of a slave.

In Oliver Twist, Dickens presents the everyday existence of the lowest members of English society and realistically portrays the horrible conditions of the nineteenth century workhouses. Hence, in the story of Oliver Twist, Dickens uses past experiences from his childhood and targets the Poor Law of 18342 which renewed the importance of the workhouse as a means of relief for the poor. In fact, Dickens’ age was a period of industrial development marked by the rise of the middle class.3 In the elections brought about by the accession of William IV in 1830, the Tories lost control of the government. Assumption of power by the Whigs opened the way to an era of accelerated progress.4 In this time period, children worked just as much, if not more, than some of the adults. After 1833, an increased amount of legislation was enacted to control the hours of labour and working conditions for children and women in manufacturing plants. The Poor Law of 1834 wanted to make the workhouse more of a deterrent to idleness as it was believed that people were poor because they were lazy and needed to be punished. So people in workhouses were deliberately treated harshly and the workhouses were similar to prisons.

Nonetheless, the plan was successful from one point of view, for within three years the cost of poor relief was reduced by more than one-third. However, this system was sharply criticized and censured: Dickens, for instance, attempted to improve the workhouse conditions with his novel Oliver Twist and as a result, this work helped influence changes in the problem. Nevertheless, in Oliver Twist, Dickens goes far beyond the mere experiences of the workhouse, extending his depiction of poverty to London’s squalid streets, dark alehouses, and thieves’ dens. Thus, he gives voice to those who had no voice, establishing a link between politics and literature with his social commentary.

In the following, it will be analyzed how Dickens attacks the defects of existing institutions in his novel Oliver Twist. Hence, it will be shown how Dickens creates a fictive world that was a mirror in which the truths of the real world were reflected. However, firstly, it is necessary to take a closer look at the historical background. Thus, the attitude of Victorian society towards the poor comes into view and with it the central issues of child labour, Poor Laws and workhouse conditions. Secondly, when regarding the central theme of child labour in Oliver Twist, one must also be aware of Dickens’ childhood and social background, Oliver Twist being partly an autobiographic novel.


1. Victorian Morals and the Poor

1.1 Poor Laws and Workhouses

[...]


1 In this context Monroe Engel states: “In all his [Dickens’] fiction, there was purpose in his portraits of the poor: “I have great faith in the Poor; to the best of my ability I always endeavour to present them in a favourable light to the rich; and shall never cease, I hope, until I die, to advocate their being made as happy and as wise as the circumstances of their condition in its utmost improvement, will admit of their becoming” (Monroe Engel, “The Social and Political Issues.” In Charles Dickens. Oliver Twist. Authoritative Text. Backgrounds and Sources, Early Reviews, Criticism. Edited by Fred Kaplan. New York/London: W.W. Norton & Company, 1993, p. 495).

2 The Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834 took power out of the hands of local parishioners and gave it to elected officials representing central authority and middleclass values. It also took away relief from the poor outside government institutions – it was either the workhouse or nothing. These harsh changes were aimed at the ablebodied poor. However, it hit the infirm, the old and the very young much harder. Many MPs (Member of Parliament) voting on the Act were southern rural landowners who had been devastated by bad harvests and rioting, for corn prices, greatly depended on for income, were at an appalling low.

3 Edward Wagenknecht, Cavalcade of the English Novel (Chicago, 1967), p. 219.

4 Harry Kaste, M.A., Cliff’s Notes on Oliver Twist (Lincoln, 1997), p. 8.


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