Disapproval of the Education System in Dickens' Hard Times
[2023-03-15 21:51:22]
How the Charles Dickens denied education system of the 19th century to explore how Dickens expresses aversion to his educational system using the first two chapters of "difficult times" I will tell you about it. Dickens is a hopeful, courageous, imaginative and intelligent person who shows these novels in his mind, such as Oliver Twist, Christmas Carol, a wonderful future. The government introduced an educational system reform that included the right to go to school for all working class children in the 18th century.
Dickens investigates what he introduced about education in difficult times and comments on how this reflects Dickens' utilitarian viewpoint Dickens presents the Victorian education system in a fundamentally negative way And that is imaginative about our view. Education is very important. He did this by squatting the educational system and ridiculating the character. In the whole novel, Dickens's purpose is to satire the education system. Ironically, Dickens explained Thomas Glad Grind and practical teaching methods for opening his novel. Because he taught the students that "only the facts of life are necessary". Including facts, Gladgade exaggerates the fact that it is the only thing essential in life. Compared with the fact, "Fantasy" (14) symbolizes imagination and miracles
Hippolyte Taine expresses "difficult times" of Dickens as "attacks on statistics, data and facts education system". This was written in 1856. To be honest, there is no difference if I say Victorian education system or current education system. What kind of rules are there today? What are we forced to learn at school? Statistics, science, algebra, and now prepare for our real world. The real world dominated by the ups and downs of the stock market. Stocks, money, numbers, figures, facts, this is Dickens' contempt, money management for our lives, and "When you will lose the light of childish imagination." (I do not like school)
How did Charles Dickens show us the difficulties indicated by the town and education system? One of the themes of Charles Dickens' book is "difficult times", industrial revolution, dramatic progress of technology, but the living standard of people gradually declines and becomes increasingly difficult. There is nothing as important as the basic layout and appearance of the proper name "Coketown". The town must be technically smart and economically developed, but each building is as simple and dirty as the next building, most of the people working in the city, their young mechanics - They are very similar to children "coke town". "Despite the Industrial Revolution, living standards are thought to be better through new communication, transportation and manufacturing methods, but this represents a greater demand for workers' work.