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Charles Dickens - Hard Times

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Charles Dickens - Hard Times

Charles Dickens’s Hard Times is a powerful social novel set in the fictional industrial town of Coketown, a place defined by factories, smoke and relentless routine. The story centres on Thomas Gradgrind, a strict advocate of facts and rationality who raises his children, Tom and Louisa, to reject imagination and emotion. Gradgrind’s rigid philosophy shapes not only his household but also the local school, where pupils are taught to value practicality above all else.

Louisa and Tom grow up emotionally stifled, their inner lives suppressed by their father’s teachings. Louisa is eventually pressured into marrying Josiah Bounderby, a wealthy mill owner who prides himself on being a self made man. Their marriage is cold and distant, revealing the damaging effects of a life built solely on logic and ambition. Tom, meanwhile, becomes increasingly resentful and reckless, seeking escape through gambling and manipulation.

Parallel to the Gradgrind family is the story of Stephen Blackpool, a kind and honest factory worker trapped in an unhappy marriage and struggling against the injustices of the industrial system. Stephen’s life becomes entangled with the Gradgrinds when he is falsely accused of a robbery committed by Tom. His tragic fate highlights the harsh realities faced by the working class.

As events unfold, Louisa reaches a breaking point and confronts the emptiness of her upbringing. Gradgrind is forced to recognise the limitations of his philosophy and the emotional harm it has caused. Through this awakening, Dickens critiques the dehumanising effects of industrialisation, utilitarian thinking and social inequality.

Hard Times remains one of Dickens’s most incisive works, celebrated for its vivid portrayal of Victorian society, its critique of mechanised education and its exploration of the essential balance between reason, compassion and imagination.

Charles Dickens’s Hard Times is a powerful social novel set in the fictional industrial town of Coketown, a place defined by factories, smoke and relentless routine. The story centres on Thomas Gradgrind, a strict advocate of facts and rationality who raises his children, Tom and Louisa, to reject imagination and emotion. Gradgrind’s rigid philosophy shapes not only his household but also the local school, where pupils are taught to value practicality above all else.

Louisa and Tom grow up emotionally stifled, their inner lives suppressed by their father’s teachings. Louisa is eventually pressured into marrying Josiah Bounderby, a wealthy mill owner who prides himself on being a self made man. Their marriage is cold and distant, revealing the damaging effects of a life built solely on logic and ambition. Tom, meanwhile, becomes increasingly resentful and reckless, seeking escape through gambling and manipulation.

Parallel to the Gradgrind family is the story of Stephen Blackpool, a kind and honest factory worker trapped in an unhappy marriage and struggling against the injustices of the industrial system. Stephen’s life becomes entangled with the Gradgrinds when he is falsely accused of a robbery committed by Tom. His tragic fate highlights the harsh realities faced by the working class.

As events unfold, Louisa reaches a breaking point and confronts the emptiness of her upbringing. Gradgrind is forced to recognise the limitations of his philosophy and the emotional harm it has caused. Through this awakening, Dickens critiques the dehumanising effects of industrialisation, utilitarian thinking and social inequality.

Hard Times remains one of Dickens’s most incisive works, celebrated for its vivid portrayal of Victorian society, its critique of mechanised education and its exploration of the essential balance between reason, compassion and imagination.

$41.82
Charles Dickens - Hard Times
$41.82

Description

Charles Dickens’s Hard Times is a powerful social novel set in the fictional industrial town of Coketown, a place defined by factories, smoke and relentless routine. The story centres on Thomas Gradgrind, a strict advocate of facts and rationality who raises his children, Tom and Louisa, to reject imagination and emotion. Gradgrind’s rigid philosophy shapes not only his household but also the local school, where pupils are taught to value practicality above all else.

Louisa and Tom grow up emotionally stifled, their inner lives suppressed by their father’s teachings. Louisa is eventually pressured into marrying Josiah Bounderby, a wealthy mill owner who prides himself on being a self made man. Their marriage is cold and distant, revealing the damaging effects of a life built solely on logic and ambition. Tom, meanwhile, becomes increasingly resentful and reckless, seeking escape through gambling and manipulation.

Parallel to the Gradgrind family is the story of Stephen Blackpool, a kind and honest factory worker trapped in an unhappy marriage and struggling against the injustices of the industrial system. Stephen’s life becomes entangled with the Gradgrinds when he is falsely accused of a robbery committed by Tom. His tragic fate highlights the harsh realities faced by the working class.

As events unfold, Louisa reaches a breaking point and confronts the emptiness of her upbringing. Gradgrind is forced to recognise the limitations of his philosophy and the emotional harm it has caused. Through this awakening, Dickens critiques the dehumanising effects of industrialisation, utilitarian thinking and social inequality.

Hard Times remains one of Dickens’s most incisive works, celebrated for its vivid portrayal of Victorian society, its critique of mechanised education and its exploration of the essential balance between reason, compassion and imagination.