Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Oliver Twist :: English Literature
Oliver Twist    Oliver Twist - As the child hero of a melodramatic novel of social  protest, Oliver Twist is meant to appeal more to our sentiments than  to our literary sensibilities. On many levels, Oliver is not a  believable character, because although he is raised in corrupt  surroundings, his purity and virtue are absolute. Throughout the  novel, Dickens uses Oliver's character to challenge the Victorian idea  that paupers and criminals are already evil at birth, arguing instead  that a corrupt environment is the source of vice. At the same time,  Oliver's incorruptibility undermines some of Dickens's assertions.  Oliver is shocked and horrified when he sees the Artful Dodger and  Charley Bates pick a stranger's pocket and again when he is forced to  participate in a burglary. Oliver's moral scruples about the sanctity  of property seem inborn in him, just as Dickens's opponents thought  that corruption is inborn in poor people. Furthermore, other pauper  children use rough Cockney slang, but Oliver, oddly enough, speaks in  proper King's English. His grammatical fastidiousness is also  inexplicable, as Oliver presumably has not been educated well. Even  when he is abused and manipulated, Oliver does not become angry or  indignant. When Sikes and Crackit force him to assist in a robbery,  Oliver merely begs to be allowed to run away and die in the  fields. Oliver does not present a complex picture of a person torn  between good and evil instead, he is goodness incarnate.    Even if we might feel that Dickens's social criticism would have been  more effective if he had focused on a more complex poor character,  like the Artful Dodger or Nancy, the audience for whom Dickens was  writing might not have been receptive to such a portrayal. Dickens's  Victorian middle-class readers were likely to hold opinions on the  poor that were only a little less extreme than those expressed by Mr.  Bumble, the beadle who treats paupers with great cruelty. In fact,  Oliver Twist was criticized for portraying thieves and prostitutes at  all. Given the strict morals of Dickens's audience, it may have seemed  necessary for him to make Oliver a saintlike figure. Because Oliver  appealed to Victorian readers' sentiments, his story may have stood a  better chance of effectively challenging their prejudices.    Nancy - A major concern of Oliver Twist is the question of whether or  not a bad environment can irrevocably poison someone's character and  soul. As the novel progresses, the character who best illustrates the  contradictory issues brought up by that question is Nancy. As a child  of the streets, Nancy has been a thief and drinks to excess. The  narrator's reference to her free and agreeable .  					    
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