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The starving orphan seeking a second helping of gruel.
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The spinster wasting away in her tattered wedding dress.
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The stone-hearted miser plagued by the ghost of Christmas past.
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More than a century after his death,
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these remain recognizable figures from the work of Charles Dickens.
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So striking is his body of work that it gave rise to its own adjective.
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But what are the features of Dickens's writing that make it so special?
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Dickens’s fiction brims with anticipation through brooding settings, plot twists, and mysteries.
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These features of his work kept his audience wanting more.
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When first published, his stories were serialized,
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meaning they were released a few chapters at a time in affordable literary journals
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and only later reprinted as books.
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This prompted fevered speculation over the cliffhangers and revelations he devised.
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Serialization not only made fiction available to a wider audience and kept them reading,
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but increased the hype around the author himself.
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Dickens became particularly popular for his wit,
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which he poured into quirky characters and satiric scenarios.
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His characters exhibit the sheer absurdity of human behavior,
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and their names often personify traits or social positions,
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like the downtrodden Bob Cratchit,
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the groveling Uriah Heap,
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and the cheery Septimus Crisparkle.
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Dickens set these colorful characters against intricate social backdrops, which mimic the society he lived in.
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For instance, he often considered the changes brought about by the Industrial Revolution.
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During this period, the lower classes experienced sordid working and living conditions.
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Dickens himself experienced this hardship as a child
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when he was forced to work in a boot blacking factory after his father was sent to debtors' prison.
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This influenced his depiction of the Marshalsea prison in Little Dorrit,
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where the titular character cares for her convict father.
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Prisons, orphanages, or slums may seem grim settings for a story,
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but they allowed Dickens to shed light on
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how his society's most invisible people lived.
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In Nicholas Nickleby,
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Nicholas takes a job with the schoolmaster Wackford Squeers.
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He soon realizes that Squeers is running a scam
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where he takes unwanted children from their parents for a fee
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and subjects them to violence and deprivation.
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Oliver Twist also deals with the plight of children in the care of the state,
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illustrating the brutal conditions of the workhouse
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in which Oliver pleads with Mr. Bumble for food.
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When he flees to London, he becomes ensnared in a criminal underworld.
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These stories frequently portray Victorian life as grimy, corrupt, and cruel.
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But Dickens also saw his time as one in which old traditions were fading away.
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London was becoming the incubator of the modern world through new patterns in industry, trade, and social mobility.
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Dickens's London is therefore a dualistic space:
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a harsh world that is simultaneously filled with wonder and possibility.
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For instance, the enigma of Great Expectations
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centers around the potential of Pip,
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an orphan plucked from obscurity by an anonymous benefactor and propelled into high society.
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In his search for purpose,
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Pip becomes the victim of other people’s ambitions for him
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and must negotiate with a shadowy cast of characters.
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Like many of Dickens’s protagonists,
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poor Pip's position is constantly destabilized,
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just one of the reasons why reading Dickens is the best of times for the reader,
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while being the worst of times for his characters.
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Dickens typically offered clear resolution by the end of his novels,
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– with the exception of The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
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The novel details the disappearance of the orphan Edwin under puzzling circumstances.
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However, Dickens died before the novel was finished
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and left no notes resolving the mystery.
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Readers continue to passionately debate over who Dickens intended as the murderer,
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and whether Edwin Drood was even murdered in the first place.
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Throughout many adaptations,
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literary homages,
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and the pages of his novels,
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Dickens’s sparkling language and panoramic worldview continue to resonate.
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Today, the adjective Dickensian often implies squalid working or living conditions.
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But to describe a novel as Dickensian is typically high praise,
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as it suggests a story in which true adventure and discovery occur in the most unexpected places.
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Although he often explored bleak material,
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Dickens’s piercing wit never failed to find light in the darkest corners.