David Copperfield (Dickens, 1850)
From Commonplace Book
Charles Dickens. David Copperfield. Pub. 1849-50. Ed. Nina Burgis and Andrew Sanders. Oxford: World's Classics, 2008.
Contents
Generally Notes
- 6 already a tension (light and funny) between individual and social identity - D wondering if he will be the hero of his own story and then going back to the hours before his birth, recounting Betsey Trotwood talking about his father and then calling his mother "Baby" to, again, play with the reference to self
- 7 potential alternative identities: Betsey Trotwood Copperfield
- 14 he denies the spirit-seeing imputed to him but is haunted in a way by the "ghost" of his altnernarice idenity, by the thought of his father rising from the dead when his mother reads the story of Lazarus
Theme Tracking
Reading and Writing
Materiality
- 28-9 After describing all the boating works in Yarmouth, the tea things and bible, and scriptural paintings (which he remembers when he sees the like as pedlars' wares), D writes,
All this I saw in the first glance after I crossed the threshold - childlike, according to my theory - and then Peggotty opened a little door and showed me my bedroom.
- interesting that he associates thick description of objects with childlike vision
Shakespeare References
- 9 doctor walks like the Ghost in Hamlet