1. Views Of Social Class
Just as in school, social class in the world of Great Expectations provides an arbitrary, external standard of value by which the characters judge one another. Charles Dickens strongly implies that judgments made from unbiased positions are always more veracious than those deduced from social standards. ... His expectations only worsened his love situation by driving him to prioritize winning Estella over all other things. ... The best example in Great Expectations of this quality is Bentley Drummle. ... Charles Dickens continuously stresses that judgments made from a socially indifferent pers...
- Word Count: 705
- Approx Pages: 3