For some reason, it changes as everyone grows up. If you change your money for money or love. For young people named Phillip Pirrip, this is not the case. It is so-called Pip. Pips change in different ways and at different times. We see Pips change from frequent, scary, ordinary, poor boy to rich and upright gentleman. "Since the beginning of the world, no one is a true gentleman, it was always a true gentleman." (Spark note) As the story began, Pip learned to be a small orphan living with a lonely sister and her husband I will.
In this literary study, the subject of identity analysis will be tested in Charles Dickens 'pips' role analysis in the "wonderful future". In the novel, Pip is a narrator and a young man who is the hero who defines identity. Pip is always a confused person seeking his identity, but he does not seem to understand who you are and where you are in your life. Sometimes Pip is not sure about his identity and he is not sure about the life he wants. Various stages of childhood, adolescence and adulthood are important elements of this story. Pip who grew up from a boy to an adult grows to an adult who knows about others more and acquires one's identity.
When a person has "great expectation", the evolution of people becomes complicated. In Charles Dickens' best novel 'Great Expectations', a small boy named Philippe Pirop is called Pip, his expectations are high, a dramatic quest for human growth, and possibility to distort the ordinary people there is. Especially the pressure in the growth process. He is trying to cross the boundaries of society when he realizes his grown experience, but he has no way to change, but strangely he has instruments, but wealth has arrogant to him It only brings. He learned that the happiness of life can only be accomplished by working hard and that great expectations based on reality only lead to tragedy and heartache. Unusual inside is more important than rare outside
In Pip 's expected novel "Great Future" to Jane Austen' s great expectation, the central character 's Pip has many expectations from himself and his own. Regardless of whether he responded to the expectations of myself or other people, how do you discover these expectations and the role of "demanding" Pip's wonderful things?