Artigo Revisado por pares

Nation and Generation in A Tale of Two Cities

1978; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 93; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/461866

ISSN

1938-1530

Autores

Albert D. Hutter,

Tópico(s)

History, Medicine, and Leadership

Resumo

A Tale of Two Cities , the French Revolution becomes a metaphor for the conflicts between generations and between classes that preoccupied Dickens throughout his career. Dickens uses a double plot and divided characters to express these conflicts; his exaggerated use of “splitting”—which the essay defines psychoanalytically—sometimes makes A Tale of Two Cities‘ language and structure appear strained and humorless. We need to locate A Tale of Two Cities within a framework of nineteenth-century attitudes toward revolution and generational conflict by using a combination of critical methods—literary, historical, psychoanalytic. This essay relates the reader's experience to the structure of the text; and it derives from Dickens’ language, characterization, and construction a critical model that describes the individual reader's experience while explaining some of the contradictory assessments of the novel over the past hundred years.

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