Explore the ways Dickens uses places and atmosphere in 'Great Expectations'.

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2.  Explore the ways Dickens uses places and atmosphere in ‘Great Expectations’.

Dickens wrote ‘Great Expectations’ in 1860. It is now well renowned for being a dark, atmospheric novel, set in 19th Century Victorian England. Charles Dickens is widely known today for the success of his novels, and his excellence in using fictional, atmospheric places in ‘Great Expectations’ to reflect the minds of characters and to explore significant themes, such as class, crime, and love. Dickens uses symbolic description to convey messages about these themes, thus creating appropriate atmospheres for the characters.

Dickens prepares the reader for the grimness of the novel as a whole by introducing melancholic places using literary devices. For example, the Kent marshes in Chapter 1, where Dickens uses symbols, personification, emotive imagery, and repetition in his description. Dickens opens Chapter 1 by using the setting of a churchyard to create an eerie mood. He describes the churchyard as ‘bleak’ and ‘overgrown’, stressing the grimness and the isolation of the churchyard during Pip’s encounter with Magwitch. Dickens also uses emotive imagery of Pip’s family gravestones. He stresses that all Pip has as a memory of his parents and his five brothers is the inscriptions carved on the family gravestones which Pip imagines as their actual appearances. Pip imagines his father as ‘stout’ with ‘curly black hair’, his mother ‘freckled’, and his five brothers being the shape of their ‘lozenges’ with ‘their hands in their trousers-pockets.’ This emotionally moves the reader, thereby creating sympathy for Pip right from the beginning, introducing the misery of the novel as a whole through the gloominess of the churchyard, the deathly tone preparing us for the theme of loss throughout the novel. Dickens uses repetition of ‘nettles’ and ‘tombstones’ to perhaps suggest that the churchyard is a place of pain and death. This emphasises the sinister mood of Pip’s encounter with Magwitch by creating anxiety in the reader. Dickens also refers to the temperature being ‘raw’. He mentions that the afternoon was heading towards evening, suggesting that it was cold and fairly dark in the churchyard at the time, the darkness symbolising mystery and the unknown, adding to the vivid apprehensive atmosphere. Dickens stresses a fearful tone throughout Chapter 1, using words such as ‘dead’, ‘black’ and ‘gibbet’, representing death, violence and crime. The repetition of ‘dead’ and ‘buried’ also creates a grim, dark and deathly mood. He describes Pip as a ‘small bundle of shivers’ and emphasises the whole setting as appearing ‘threatening’ to Pip by stressing the imagery of the aggressive sea, the comparison of the wind ‘rushing’ to a predator, and the personification of the red sky being ‘angry’, again suggesting violence and death contributing to the ominous atmosphere.

In Chapter 1, Dickens uses the pathetic fallacy to show characterisation, reflecting the minds of both Pip and Magwitch by creating a sinister atmosphere. Pip’s name suggests that like a seed, he is small, young and vulnerable, and will take a journey to grow into manhood. During Pip’s encounter with Magwitch, an apprehensive atmosphere helps Dickens to portray Pip as being easily intimidated and weak by emphasising Pip’s vulnerability. Magwitch is described as a ‘fearful’ man; Dickens presents Magwitch with the repulsive appearance of a stereotypical convict. He includes details such as Magwitch having ‘broken shoes’ and not wearing a hat, only a ‘rag tied round his head’ to hint to the reader that there is something peculiar and rough about him, as he is not following the typical Victorian style of middle-class dress. An ominous tone helps Dickens to portray Magwitch as being threatening and powerful by emphasising his abusive and dominating behaviour towards Pip. However, Dickens hints that on the inside, Magwitch is not an all-bad person. Like Pip, Magwitch is presented as a victim suffering pain. To add tension, Dickens uses long, dramatic sentences to portray Magwitch’s long, traumatic, desperate journey of running. Magwitch also throws out a long line of threats at Pip, emphasising his panic and agitation. His desperation for food is shown when he tries to go as far as to scare Pip, a young child, with another imaginary criminal. Dickens also uses the repetition of ‘limped’ and uses words such as ‘cut’, ‘torn’ and ‘shuddering’ portraying Magwitch’s suffering.

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Dickens uses the ominous tone of Chapter 1 to express his outlook on the typical morals and philosophy in Victorian England and to explore themes that he later covers, such as childhood, crime, and class. Dickens portrays childhood as being a strong influence on the character’s later on in life. He uses Pip in Chapter 1 to show this. Pip had a very unhappy, tragic childhood, mourning over his family and lacking love. Dickens suggests that this guided him to his dark, dreary, and lonely imagination in the churchyard on the evening of his encounter with Magwitch. Pip imagines ‘dead ...

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