Year 2021,
Volume: 3 Issue: 1, 262 - 271, 13.06.2021
Safaa Falah Hasan Alsaragna
References
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John Locke's Epistemological Empiricism and its Impact upon the Realistic Victorian Literature: Dickens' Great Expectations
Year 2021,
Volume: 3 Issue: 1, 262 - 271, 13.06.2021
Safaa Falah Hasan Alsaragna
Abstract
This paper suggests an exclusive study by investigating the impact of Locke’s philosophies that are mainly implemented in his work An Essay Concerning Human Understanding on the field of literature in general and on the Victorian literature in particular. The study will concentrate on Locke's reflections on the Victorian realistic literature and by applying Lockean notions on Dickens’ Great Expectations and its main character Pip. Dickens has recorded the voyage of Pip from his innocent childhood to his expectations of adulthood. He solved the enigma of Pip’s character and portrayed his inner world by firmly inspiring the base concepts and theories of Locke. Locke's empirical thought has intervened in the work mentioned above by recording cognitive development and enhancing its concept of realism. As to say, the writings of Dickens and his contemporaries not only resulted from the tough circumstances of the century, yet from Locke’s philosophical production as well.
References
- Dickens, C. (2003). Great Expectations. 2nd ed. London: Penguin Classics.
- Dussinger, John A. (1974). The Discourse of the Mind in Eighteenth-Century
Fiction. The Netherlands: Mouton and Co. N.., Publishers, The Hague
- Eliot, G. (1856). Art And Belles Lettres: Review Of Modern Painters III,
Westminster Review.
- Gilbert. R. (1993). Locke On the Human Understanding, Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
- Greenblatt &. Abrams M.H. . (2006). "John Locke" The Norton Anthology of
English Literature. 8th ed. Vol.1.. New York: Norton and Company, Inc.
- Habib, R. (2008) A History of Literary Criticism and Theory: From Plato to the
Present. Malden, Mass: Blackwell Pub.
- Ian, W. (1957). The Rise of the Novel: Studies in Defoe, Richardson, and
Fielding. London: Chatto and Windus.
- John, Y. (1956) John Locke and the Way of Ideas, oxford: Oxford University
Press.
- Kerns, T. Lecture Introduction to John Locke, North Seattle Community
College. Available at: http://philosophycourse.info/lecsite
- Levine, G. (2008). Realism, Ethics and Secularism: Essays on Victorian
Literature and Science. Cambridge University Press.
- Lock, J. 1964. (1690). An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. In Ed. A. D.
Woozley. United States of America: Wm. Collins Sons Co. Ltd.
- Reed, Robert R (2010). Dickens’s Hyperrealism. Columbus: Ohio State UP.
- Romano, J. (1978). Dickens and Reality. New York: Columbia UP.
- Rubaia, R. (2017). Locke’s Theory of Ideas: a Critical Exposition, Philosophy and
Progress.
- Smith, G. (2003). Dickens and the Dream of Cinema. Manchester, UK: Manchester UP.
- Tingting, Tang & Lihui, Liu. (2015). Pip’s Cognitive Development in Great
Expectations From the Viewpoint of Space Product. Cscanada.
- Varney, A. (2005). Eighteenth –Century Writers In THEIR World: A
Mighty Maze. USA: ST. MARTIN'S PRESS, INC.
- Zaiter, Walid. (2018). John Locke's Impact on the Eighteenth Century Writers:
Pope, Defoe and Richardson. International Journal of Humanities.