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    • Moralist, satirist

      • Dickens, Charles John Huffam (1812-1870), probably the best-known and, to many people, the greatest English novelist of the 19th century. A moralist, satirist, and social reformer, Dickens crafted complex plots and striking characters that capture the panorama of English society.
      charles-dickens.org/charles-dickens-biography.php
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  2. Dickens has satirically attacked on certain evils, pseudo values and abuses of Victorian society. The prime target of satire is utilitarianism in the fields like education, business, industry, materialism, laissez faire, greed for money, hypocrisy, trade-unionism, and snobbery.

  3. Hard Times, novel by Charles Dickens, published in serial form (as Hard Times: For These Times) in the periodical Household Words from April to August 1854 and in book form later the same year. The novel is a bitter indictment of industrialization, with its dehumanizing effects on workers and communities in mid-19th-century England.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Charles Dickens is addressed as a satirist in reference to this novel where he intentionally uses humour to achieve this status. The language used by the characters, the settings and the mood of the novel is flared with humour and aid the satire.

  5. In Great Expectations, Charles Dickens employs humor, pathos, and satire to create a rich, multi-dimensional narrative. Humor is evident in the quirky characters and their interactions, while...

  6. Hard Times is one of the books, Charles Dickens wrote to criticize the process of industrialization and its impacts on different social divisions of life in England. It was published in 1854. The novel proved a masterpiece of satire. Despite its being the shortest, it is still more biting than other novels by Dickens.

  7. A list of important facts about Charles Dickens's Hard Times, including setting, climax, protagonists, and antagonists.

  8. Satire is the use of humor, irony, sarcasm, or ridicule to criticize something or someone. Public figures, such as politicians, are often the subject of satire, but satirists can take... read full definition

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