Hard Times by Charles Dickens
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Name: MÂȘ Ăngeles MartĂnez LĂłpezHARD TIMES BY CHARLES DICKENS – STUDY QUESTIONS  WORKSHEET 1 BOOK THE FIRST â SOWINGChapter 1: Why is everything at Thomas Gradgrindâs school described as âsquareâ? Maybe it suggests strictness and rigidity, only facts not feelings. He seems a machine.2. In the 1st chapter comment on how:â The setting accompanies the ideology transmitted: âthe scene was plain, bare, monotonous vault of a schoolroomâ (page 1). Only facts, there are no ornaments, feelings or imagination, monotonous, strict and simple.â The physical attributes of Thomas Gradgrind accompany his personality: âsquareâ âmouth, which was wide, thin, and hard setâ, âvoice, which was inflexible, dry and dictatorialâ, âhair, which bristled on the skirts of his bald head, a plantation of firs to keep the wind from its shining surface, all covered with knobs, like the crust of a plum pieâ â Language accompanies meaning: Repetition of âthe emphasis was helped by the speakerâsâ as if he was a machine, monotonous, mechanical,  and always the same. Repetition of the words âfactsâ and âsquareâ. Simple sentences:  âNow, what I want is factsâ 3. Explain the metaphorical effect of talking about the young students as âlittle vesselsâ (Ch1) or âlittle pitchersâ (Ch2).It suggests that the children are as objects they are empty of facts and must be fulfilled with them to be useful.4. Chapter 3: Explain the title of this chapter, âA Loopholeâ. Although Mr. Gradgrind had taught his children with only facts, there is a âloopholeâ (a fissure, an escape of knowledge) in their education, because they have curiosity and imagination.  Also can refer to the âholeâ through the children was peering the circus.5. Why is Gradgrindâs home called âStone Lodgeâ? Comment upon the significance of Stone Lodge and how this place contributes to the characterization of Mr. Grangrind. Because reflects Mr. Grandgrind character, without feelings, symmetrical (âsquareâ), mechanical, without ornaments, strict.6. Chapter 4: How do the physical attributes assigned to Mr. Bounderby complement his personality? âwith a stare and mechanical laughâ, âmade out of a coarse materialâ, âa man with a âŠthe Bully of humilityâ (pages 16-17).He seems a  mechanical person, leaded by reason and facts, proud.7. Chapter 5: Coketown acquires such importance in the novel that this place is even described as if it were a character in itself (see for instance, the beginning of chapter 5). What does Coketown symbolize? What is it like? And how is it described? Coketown symbolizes the real industrial towns of England, Industrialism. It is mechanical, monotonous (all buildings and people are the same), dirty, sad, polluted, unnatural, noisy.8. In which way do Mr Gradgrindâs children resemble the Coketown working-people? They have been educated in a monotonous, based on fact way, banned from imagination and creativity.9. Chapter 6: Notice the positive portrayal of the circus people in chapters 5 and 6. In which way do the characterization of Sleary and the other circus characters contrast the description that the narrator offers of Mr. Gradgrind and Mr Bounderby?
Is a world of fancy and imagination in contrast with the mechanical and monotonous world of fact and reason. They are described with imperfections; they are real, magical, and sentimental. 10. Explain, in your own words, Mr Slearyâs philosophy, as described by the end of chapter 6. The life is not only facts and rules; there must be also time to entertainment, amusement and imagination.11. Chapter 10: Chapter 10 introduces the character of Stephen Blackpool in the second paragraph, by means of a very long, grammatically complex sentence. What is the effect of introducing this character in such a way? What does this style indicate about Stephen and his living conditions?To emphasize how hard is his life and his living conditions. 12. What is the implication of using the metonymy âthe Handsâ to refer to the working-class community of Coketown? They lose their humanity; they are like machines used to work.13. Chapter 11: What is the effect of describing the factories in Coketown as âFairy Palacesâ? Is irony, to emphasize how awful is the life in factories. Contrast the beauty and magical of fairy palaces with the mechanical, monotonous, dirty life in factories.14. Chapter 16: In this chapter, Dickens describes the act of courting as a âmanufacturingâ exchange of gifts. What is the effect of such a description and how that is emphasize Dickensâs attack on Utilitarism? In this way he is treating marriage and home life in a process of logic and mechanization. There are no feelings, so people are like machines guided by logic and facts. Utilitarism transform people in machines.WORKSHEET 2-BOOK THE SECOND. REAPINGÂ 1. Chapter 1: Notice how Dickens masterfully transforms in this chapter the sun from traditionally being a symbol of rebirth and warmth in literature into a symbol of death and negativity.