Difference between revisions of "Great Expectations (Dickens, 1861)"

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(Shakespeare References)
(Reading/Writing)
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*122-3 handwriting and illiteracy with the Gargerys after Mrs Joe's assault
 
*122-3 handwriting and illiteracy with the Gargerys after Mrs Joe's assault
 
*133 Wopsle reading aloud to other men at the pub (the newspaper)
 
*133 Wopsle reading aloud to other men at the pub (the newspaper)
 +
*147 Pip uncomfortable with the Bible reading at church - he seems at odds with texts as they intrude into the narrative, they're contested or inappropriate
  
 
===Materiality===
 
===Materiality===

Revision as of 11:10, 6 May 2017

General Notes

  • 17 interchangeability of people within clothes, as in Bleak House
  • 33 the sergeant recites a jingle for Musical Glasses as a toast - advertising
  • amazing sentence about all the material things tending toward the fugitives
  • 36-7 perception fuddled by atmosphere as they pursue the convicts to the Marshes, again reminiscent of Bleak House (though pitched differently since its through Pip's eyes vs the disembodied narrator, perhaps a little closer to Esther)
  • 41 Pip's "cowardice" (that is his guilt and self-recrimination) - does this go through?
  • 43 national debt - Framley mentions it was a big issue in late 1850s
  • 60 the patterning of clocks: the Dutch clock at the Gargerys', at Satis house "everything in the room had stopped like the watch and the clock, a long time ago"
    • 80 the clock stopped at 8:40
  • Satis House as the gothic space within the Bildungsroman, a place of weird stasis in a progressive trajectory
    • impt too that this is through Pip's perspective
  • 63 P's disquisition on injustice, followed by seeing a ghost
  • 93-4 again Pip's guilty conscience
  • 95 the displaced sexual energy of Miss H's relationship with estella
  • 125 Pip returning to Satis House, the dark, gothic space which he internalizes as self-loathing and shame

Theme Tracking

Reading/Writing

  • 3 Pip imagining his dead parents from the writing on their tombstones
  • 45 Pip's slate and chalk letter to Joe
  • 73 the tattered book for students at Mr Wopsle's great aunt's school
  • 109 teaching Joe at the Battery
  • 117 Pip being "read at" by Wopsle - and then refracting his sister's assault throwing that play afterwards (Barnwell)
  • 122-3 handwriting and illiteracy with the Gargerys after Mrs Joe's assault
  • 133 Wopsle reading aloud to other men at the pub (the newspaper)
  • 147 Pip uncomfortable with the Bible reading at church - he seems at odds with texts as they intrude into the narrative, they're contested or inappropriate

Materiality

  • 57 Miss Havisham's dress
  • 122 Mrs Joe sees multiplied "visionary teacups" after her assault

Shakespeare References

  • 25 Wopsle says Grace like "a religious cross of the Ghost in Hamlet with Richard the Third"
  • 44 again Wopsle reciting Mark Anthony's funeral oration from Julius Caesar to the children
  • 77 Wopsle declaiming unspecified passage from Richard the Third, ending, "...as the poet said"
  • 118 again Wopsle and Richard III, plus possibly misremembered King John
  • 133 Wopsle becoming Timon and Coriolanus in reciting a murder inquest from a newspaper - though here it's Pip supplying the Shakespeare comparisons