Difference between revisions of "Douglas-Fairhurst 2011"

From Commonplace Book
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "Douglas-Fairhurst, Robert. ''Becoming Dickens: the Invention of a Novelist.'' Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011. Print. *237: Going through Ble...")
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
Douglas-Fairhurst, Robert. ''Becoming Dickens: the Invention of a Novelist.'' Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011. Print.
 
Douglas-Fairhurst, Robert. ''Becoming Dickens: the Invention of a Novelist.'' Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011. Print.
  
*237: Going through [[Bleak House (1853)|Bleak House]], Forster worried that the spikily satirical representation of Skimpole was too obviously based on the poet and essayist Leigh Hunt. Dickens smoothed it down. Even when he said things Dickens would have preferred not to hear, such as that Little Nell needed to die if ''The Old Curiosity Shop'' was to be completed satisfactorily, a sacrifice both to the marketplace and to the demands of the plot, Dickens listened and did as Forster urged.
+
*237: Going through [[Bleak House (1853)|Bleak House]], Forster worried that the spikily satirical representation of Skimpole was too obviously based on the poet and essayist Leigh Hunt. Dickens smoothed it down. Even when he said things Dickens would have preferred not to hear, such as that Little Nell needed to die if ''The Old Curiosity Shop'' was to be completed satisfactorily, a sacrifice both to the marketplace and to the demands of the plot, Dickens listened and did as Forster urged. What these revisions shared was a '''concern for correctness that was as much moral as aesthetic. They reflected Forster's conviction that what his period needed was improving literature''': writing that was better not just because it was funnier or more moving than anything published before, but because it was designed to make its readers feel better, act better. And if Dickens was to be literature's champion, then Forster was happy to act as his squire: a guide, goad, and collaborator all in one.
 +
**Sources for potential tie to

Revision as of 14:50, 8 June 2017

Douglas-Fairhurst, Robert. Becoming Dickens: the Invention of a Novelist. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011. Print.

  • 237: Going through Bleak House, Forster worried that the spikily satirical representation of Skimpole was too obviously based on the poet and essayist Leigh Hunt. Dickens smoothed it down. Even when he said things Dickens would have preferred not to hear, such as that Little Nell needed to die if The Old Curiosity Shop was to be completed satisfactorily, a sacrifice both to the marketplace and to the demands of the plot, Dickens listened and did as Forster urged. What these revisions shared was a concern for correctness that was as much moral as aesthetic. They reflected Forster's conviction that what his period needed was improving literature: writing that was better not just because it was funnier or more moving than anything published before, but because it was designed to make its readers feel better, act better. And if Dickens was to be literature's champion, then Forster was happy to act as his squire: a guide, goad, and collaborator all in one.
    • Sources for potential tie to