Contents introduction william Makepeace Thackeray, his early life and literary career Vanity Fair- a novel without a hero critical analysis of this novel conclusion glossary Bibliography introduction the aim of the work
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- The structure of the work
- 1. William Makepeace Thackeray, his early life and literary career.
The actuality of the work: The actuality of the work is that the Victorian literature has been influential to society up to our day. We shall try to indicate briefly some of the ways in which the political, intellectual and emotional circumstances of a period of revolutionary upheaval affected the scope, subject-matter, themes values and even language of a number of Victorian age’s works.
The structure of the work: it consists of introduction, two chapters, conclusion and bibliography. The first chapter is devoted to the study of life and literary career of the author. The second chapter is devoted to observing and analyzing his novel “Vanity Fair” . Total amount of the work is -- pages. Introduction deals with the aim , tasks, actuality, novelty and practical value of the qualification paper. The results achieved during the investigation are summarize in conclusion. Bibliography lists all the scientific and internet sources and references used for investigation. 1. William Makepeace Thackeray, his early life and literary career. William Makepeace Thackeray was one of the greatest representatives of the English Victorian age .The Victorian age was characterized by sharp contradictions. In many ways it was an age of progress. The Victorian era marks the climax of England’s rise to economic and military supremacy. The nineteenth century England became the first modern, industrialized nation. It ruled the most widespread empire in world history, embracing all of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, Pakistan, and many smaller countries in Asia, and the Caribbean. But internally England was not stable. There was too much poverty, too much injustice and fierce exploitation of man by man. The workers fought for their rights, their political demands were expressed in the People’s Charter in 1833.The Chartist movement was a revolutionary movement of the English workers, which lasted till 1848.The Chartists introduced their own literature. The Chartist writers tried their hand at different genres. They wrote articles, short stories, songs, epigrams, poems. Chartists (for example: Ernest Jones “The Song of the Lower Classes”, Thomas Hood “The Song of the Shirt) described the struggle of the workers for their rights, they showed the ruthless exploitation and the miserable fate of the poor. The ideas of Chartism attracted the attention of many progressive-minded people of the time. Many prominent writers became aware of the social injustice around them and tried to picture them in their works. The greatest novelists of the age were Charles Dickens, William Makepeace Thackeray, Charlotte Bronte, Elizabeth Gaskell, George Eliot. The writers used the novel as a tool to protest against the evils in contemporary social and economic life and to picture the world in a realistic way. They expressed deep sympathy for the working people; described the unbearable conditions of their life and work, Criticism in their works was very strong, so some scholars called them Critical Realists, and the trend to which they belonged-Critical Realism,”Hard Times” by Charles Dickens1 and “Mary Barton” by Elizabeth Gaskell are the bright example s of that literature, in which the Chartist movement is described. The contribution of the writers belonging to the trend of realism in world literature is enormous .They created a broad picture of social life, exposed and attacked the vices of the contemporary society, sided with the common people in their passionate protest against unbearable exploitation and expressed their hopes for a better future. As for the poetry of that time, English and American critics consider Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning to be the two great pillars on which Victorian poetry rested. Unlike the poetry of the Romantic Age, their poetry demonstrated the conservatism, optimism, and self-assurance that marked the poetry of the Victorian age. Thanks to such amusements, his own inability to excel at mathematics, the poor preparation he had received at Charterhouse, and a penchant for gambling and trips to the Continent, Thackeray left the university without a degree after two years. The life of the undergraduate at “Oxbridge” is represented obliquely for “the life of such boys does not bear telling altogether” in Pendennis. Thackeray did, however, form friendships at Cambridge that were lasting, the most important of which was with Edward Fitzgerald. And while he failed to distinguish himself at school, he did develop the fondness for Horace and other classical authors his childhood experiences had almost robbed him of. After leaving Cambridge, Thackeray traveled on the Continent, spending a winter at Weimar, which included at introduction to the aged Goethe. Thackeray took away from Weimar a command of the language, a knowledge of German Romantic literature, and an increasing skepticism about religious doctrine. During the Victorian era Thackeray was ranked second only to Charles Dickens, but he is now much less widely read and is known almost exclusively for Vanity Fair, which has become a fixture in university courses, and has been repeatedly adapted for the cinema and television. William Makepeace Thackeray was born in Calcutta on 18 July 1811.Both his parents were of Anglo-Indian descent, and his father, Richmond Thackeray was born at South Mimms and went to India in 1798 at age sixteen as a writer with the East India Company. Richmond fathered a daughter, Sarah Redfield, in 1804 with Charlotte Sophia Rudd2, his possibly Eurasian mistress, and both mother and daughter were named in his will. Such liaisons were common among gentlemen of the East India Company, and it formed no bar to his later courting and marrying William’s mother. Thackeray’s mother Anne Becher was “one of the reigning beauties of the day” and a daughter of John Harmon Becher, Collector of the South 24 Parganas district, of an old Bengal civilian family” noted for the tenderness of its women”. Anne Becher and Richmond Thackeray were married in Calcutta on 13 October 1810. Their only child was William. There is a fine miniature portrait of Anne Becher Thackeray and William Makepeace Thackeray, aged about two, done in Madras by George Chinnery 1813. Anne’s family’s deception was unexpectedly revealed in 1812, when Richmond Thackeray unwittingly invited the supposedly dead Carmichael-Smyth to dinner. Five years later, after Richmond had died of a fever on 13 September 1815, Anne married Henry Carmichael-Smyth, on 13 March 1817.The couple moved to England in 1820 and his son was sent to home to England at five years old to be educated, stopping at St. Helena on the way and having a servant point out to him the prisoner Napoleon, who “eats three sheep every day, and all the little children he can lay hands on” The separation from his mother had a traumatic effect on the young Thackeray, which he discussed in his essay” On Letts’s Diary” in The Roundabout Papers. In England he was educated at schools in Southampton and Chiswick. After attending several grammar schools Thackeray went in 1822 to Charterhouse, the London public school, where he led a rather lonely and miserable existence and he became a close friend of John Leech. Thackeray disliked Charterhouse, and parodied it in his fiction as “Slaughterhouse”. Nevertheless, Thackeray was honoured in the Charterhouse Chapel with a monument after his death. Illness in his last year there, during which he reportedly grew to his full height of six foot three, postponed his matriculation at Trinity College Cambridge, until February 1829. He was happier while studying at Trinity College, Cambridge in 1828-1830. In 1830 he left Cambridge without taking a degree and during 1831-33 he studied law at the Middle Temple, London. He then considered painting as a profession: his artistic gifts are seen in his letters and many of his early writings, which are amusingly and energetically illustrated. Thackeray then travelled for some time on the continent, visiting Paris and Weimar, where he met Goethe. He returned to England at the age of 21.All his efforts at this time have a dilettante air, understandable in a young man who, on coming of age in 1832, had inherited $20.000 from his father. He soon lost his fortune, however, through gambling and unlucky speculations and investments and he squandered much of it on gambling and on funding two successful newspapers, The National Standard and The Constitutional, for which he had hoped to write. He also lost a good part of his fortune in the collapse of two Indian banks. Forced to consider a profession to support himself, he turned first to art, which he studied in Paris, but did not pursue it, except in later years as the illustrator of some of his own novels and other writingsю In 1836, while studying art in Paris, he married a penniless Irish girl, on 20 August 1836, Isabella Gethin Shaw (1816–1893), second daughter of Isabella Creagh Shaw and Matthew Shaw, a colonel who had died after distinguished service, primarily in India. The Thackeray’s had three children, all girls: Anne Isabella3 (1837–1919), Jane (who died at eight months old) and Harriet Marian (1840–1875). Of Thackeray’s three daughters, one died in infancy (1839); and in 1840, after her last confinement, Mrs. Thackeray became insane. She never recovered and long survived her husband, living with friends in the country. Thackeray was, in effect, a widower, relying much on club life and gradually giving more and more attention to his daughters, for whom he established a home in London in 1846. The serial publication in 1847–48 of his novel Vanity Fair brought Thackeray both fame and prosperity, and from then on he was an established author on the English scene. 8
Thackeray’s writing can be divided into four distinct periods. The first, from 1837 to 1843, was a period in which he exercised an almost passionate vigor to point out where society had gone wrong. He places himself outside his writing through his superior attitude toward his characters, lower-class subjects whom he treats in the most disparaging manner conceivable. There is a glimmer of the Thackeray yet to come when he shifts his focus to the middle class, and when, in The History of Samuel Titmarsh and the Great Hoggarty Diamond (1841; later published as The Great Hoggarty Diamond, 1848), he presents the likable Sam Tit marsh. Thackeray cast himself as Tit marsh, thereby indicating his concern about class. This concern was to dominate his writing. 9
Tragedy struck in Thackeray’s personal life as his wife, Isabella, succumbed to depression after the birth of their third child, in 1840. Finding that he could get no work done at home, he spent more and more time away until September 1840, when he realised how grave his wife’s condition was. Struck by guilt, he set out with his wife to Ireland. During the crossing she threw herself from a water-closet into the sea, but she was pulled from the waters. They fled back home after a four-week battle with her mother. From November 1840 to February 1842 Isabella was in and out of professional care, as her condition waxed and waned. She eventually deteriorated into a permanent state of detachment from reality. Thackeray desperately sought cures for her, but nothing worked, and she ended up in two different asylums in or near Paris until 1845, after which Thackeray took her back to England, where he installed her with a Mrs Bakewell at Camberwell. Isabella outlived her husband by 30 years, in the end being cared for by a family named Thompson in Leigh-on-Sea at South end until her death in 1894 After his wife’s illness Thackeray became a de facto widower, never establishing another permanent relationship. He did pursue other women, however, in particular Mrs Jane Brookfield4 and Sally Baxter. In 1851 Mr Brookfield barred Thackeray from further visits to or correspondence with Jane. Baxter, an American twenty years Thackeray’s junior whom he met during a lecture tour in New York City in 1852, married another man In the early 1840s Thackeray had some success with two travel books, The Paris Sketch Book and The Irish Sketch Book, the latter marked by hostility to Irish Catholics. However, as the book appealed to British prejudices, Thackeray was given the job of being Punch’s Irish expert, often under the pseudonym Hibernis Hibernior5 It was Thackeray, in other words, who was chiefly responsible for Punch‘s notoriously hostile and condescending depictions of the Irish during An Gorta Mór (1845–51) Thackeray achieved more recognition with his Snob Papers (serialised 1846/47, published in book form in 1848), but the work that really established his fame was the novel Vanity Fair, which first appeared in serialised instalments beginning in January 1847. Even before Vanity Fair completed its serial run esses, including a near-fatal one that Thackeray had become a celebrity, sought after by the very lords and ladies whom he satirised. They hailed him as the equal of Dickens6. He remained "at the top of the tree," as he put it, for the rest of his life, during which he produced several large novels, notably Pendennis, The Newcomes and The History of Henry Esmond, despite various illnesses, including a near- fatal one that struck him in 1849 in the middle of writing Pendennis. He twice visited the United States on lecture tours during this period. Thackeray also gave lectures in London on the English humorists of the eighteenth century, and on the first four Hanoverian monarchs. The latter series was published in book form as The Four Georges. In Oxford he stood unsuccessfully as an independent for Parliament. He was narrowly beaten by Cardwell, who received 1,070 votes, as against 1,005 for Thackeray. In 1860 Thackeray became editor of the newly established Cornhill Magazine, but he was never comfortable in the role, preferring to contribute to the magazine as the writer of a column called Roundabout Papers. Thackeray’s grave at Kensal Green Cemetery, London, photographed in 2014 Thackeray’s health worsened during the 1850s and he was plagued by a recurring stricture of the urethra that laid him up for days at a time. He also felt that he had lost much of his creative impetus. He worsened matters by excessive eating and drinking, and avoiding exercise, though he enjoyed horseback-riding (he kept a horse). He has been described as "the greatest literary glutton who ever lived". His main activity apart from writing was "guttling and gorging". He could not break his addiction to spicy peppers, further ruining his digestion. On 23 December 1863, after returning from dining out and before dressing for bed, he suffered a stroke. He was found dead in his bed the following morning. His death at the age of fifty-two was entirely unexpected, and shocked his family, his friends and the reading public. An estimated 7,000 people attended his funeral at Kensington Gardens. He was buried on 29 December at Kensal Green Cemetery, and a memorial bust sculpted by Marochetti can be found in Westminster Abbey. Download 244.82 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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