A difficult period - a debate about educational themes of difficult times of Charles Dickens' Charles Dickens is a great author of the 19th century and his books are accepted and loved nationwide. The meaning of his book is more than just a novel, so many people understand. In the novel "Tough Guy", Dickens strongly criticized the British educational system and its evolution over the years: "Utilitarianism" philosophy of the 19th century. Dickens believes that this system fails because it changes children's mind and morality, but this novel attempts to show the fear caused by this system.
Charles Dickens' difficult times Charles Dickens was one of the most important novels of the Victorian era. He founded an industrial society in England in the 19th century. In this era, the UK is prosperous in manufacturing and trade thanks to advanced technology. This is also a troublesome period. Industrial development has brought a tough situation to the working class. Workers are poor and diligent. Women and children work for hours. - The difficult time of Charles Dickens was written in 1854. It is written weekly in a magazine called "Family Words". It seems like normal soap, but it is once a week. Because he is a journalist, this magazine is owned by Charles Dickens. This book was written during the industrial revolution. A factory was built near major towns like Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham.
Dickens' industrialization and Utilitarianism Charles Dickens of difficult times used his virtual town of the Hard Times to express the British industrialization of those days. However, most of these symptoms are not explained exactly compared to the actual situation of the industrialization process. - The Impact of William Blake's Industrialization William Black's London "London" is an example of black disapproval of the changes that occurred during his life. In his work 'Song of Experience', Black explains the industrial revolutionary dilemma in his poem "London" he brought to himself and the destruction of the relationship between ordinary people and land. He stated that Thames and the streets of the street are dominated by "privileged" or commercial interests, he calls "handcuffs for psychomotorism", and on the face of everyone is "a trace of weakness, of sorrow There was a trace ". We talked about "every cry of everyone" and "voice of fear of every baby".