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" Charles Dickens : "
Eslick, Mark Andrew
Bowen, JohnEslick, Mark AndrewBowen, John
Document Type
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Latin Dissertation
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Record Number
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835035
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Doc. No
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TLets556254
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Main Entry
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Bowen, John
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University of York
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Title & Author
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Charles Dickens :\ Eslick, Mark AndrewBowen, JohnEslick, Mark AndrewBowen, John
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College
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University of York
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Date
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2011
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Degree
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Thesis (Ph.D.)
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student score
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2011
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Abstract
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This thesis explores the role of anti-Catholicism and Catholicism in the life and work of Charles Dickens. A critical consensus has emerged that Dickens was vehemently anti-Catholic. Yet a 'curious dream' he had of his beloved dead sister-in-law, Mary Hogarth, in which her spirit appears to him in the guise of the Madonna, suggests that his overt anti-Catholicism masks a profoundly complex relationship to the 'Church of Rome'. 'Dickens: Anti-Catholicism and Catholicism' therefore re-evaluates the anti-Catholic sentiments in the author's novels, journalism and letters by contextualizing them in relation to key events of the nineteenth-century Catholic revival such as the 1850 Papal Aggression. I argue that Dickens often employs anti-Catholicism not simply as a religious prejudice, but as a mode of discourse through which he disrupts, displaces or reinforces a range of secular anxieties. 'Dickens: Anti-Catholicism and Catholicism' also uncovers and explores the often cryptic moments in Dickens's writing when Catholic motifs are invoked that suggest a strange 'attraction of repulsion' to Roman Catholicism. Catholicism seems to offer him a rich source of imaginative and narrative possibilities. Reading Dickens's fiction through the lens of Catholicism can therefore reveal a much more ambivalent relationship to the religion than his apparent beliefs as well as unearthing new ways of thinking about his work.
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Added Entry
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University of York
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