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Charles
Dickens
 Biography of Charles Dickens


 Little Dorrit
 Charles Dickens was born in Portsmouth on 7 th of
  February, 1812 into a middle class family of civil servant
  John Dickens who was an open-hearted and kind man.
  Charles spent his childhood in the atmosphere of love and
  friendship, though his mother, Elisabeth, was a
  snobbish, demanding, rather hard and rather silly.

 The happiest years were between 1817 and 1822, when John
  Dickens held a good post in the Chatham Dockyard. It was
  an enchanted time for little Charles.
• The family lived in poverty. Their household consisted
of Mr. and Mrs. Dickens, their five children, a servant
and James Larmert, a relative by marriage. Charles
schooling came to an end and he had to contribute to
the family funds. John Larmert found him a job in a
warehouse for several shillings a week.
• Meanwhile, John Dickens was put into Marshalsea
Debtors prison for his debts and his family had to
follow him into the prison because the debts were
great and they had nobody in London to address for
money. They had to stay in prison until Mr. Dickens
could pay all his debts
• After being released John Dickens
                            decided to take his son away from the
                            warehouse, but his mother didn’t want
                            to lose the money her son was earning.
                            Charles Dickens could never forgive her.
                            When Dickens was fifteen he became a
                            lawyer's clerk. In 1822, having learned
                            shorthand, he secured a full time
                            position in the “Mirror of the
                            Parliament.


• At 25, in 1837, Charles Dickens was already famous. It was a
successful period of his life: his first son was born, his family
moved out of lodgings into a twelve-room house. During the next
six years of writing Charles Dickens observed life and attacked
debtors, prisons, schools and workhouses.
• Charles Dickens was a very thoughtful writer. There was
a very important element in his work which is above all
the others. It is the power of characterisation. Most of the
people in his stories are in a sense “types”, they are based
on real life people, though he gave them an independent
vitality.

• In spite of
          a large family Dickens couldn’t help travelling.
Dickens and his household left England for Italy. They
came back home in autumn 1845, with the sixth child
born abroad.
•He visited Italy and Paris, took and active part in
political life of England, started “the Great
Expectations”.
•Dickens's love of humanity
and the inherent goodness of
common man opposed to the
egoism of the upper classes
makes him a central figure in
the literature of England in
the 19 th century. Charles
Dickens undertook several
trips in 1864-1869 to Australia,
the USA and Ireland.
Afterwards he became ill and
died on 9 June 1870. He was
buried in the Poets’ Corner in
Westminster Abbey in
London.
Little Dorrit is a serial novel by Charles Dickens published
originally between 1855 and 1857. It is a work of satire on
the shortcomings of the government and society of the
period. Much of Dickens' ire is focused upon the
institutions of debtors' prisons—in which people who
owed money were imprisoned, unable to work, until they
have repaid their debts. The representative prison in this
case is the Marshalsea where the author's own father had
been imprisoned. Most of Dickens' other critiques in this
particular novel concern the social safety net: industry and
the treatment and safety of workers; the bureaucracy of the
British Treasury and the separation of people based on the
lack of interaction between the classe
 Amy Dorrit; The youngest member of the Dorrit
  family, Amy is a 20-something woman who looks like an
  adolescent. She lives her life in totally unacknowledged
  service to her deluded and hapless family. Her main
  personality trait is utter selflessness.

 Arthur Clennam; The 40-year-old son of a cold, harsh
  woman and a weak man, Arthur struggles to find a place for
  himself at a seemingly too-late time of life. After learning a
  few harsh lessons about love and finance, he gets a happy
  ending.
•William Dorrit; At first called "The Father of the Marshalsea," Dorrit is the
oldest prisoner in the debtor's jail, living on selfish pretensions of former
grandeur. After he is discovered to be heir to a huge fortune, Dorrit spends
the rest of the novel trying to live up to his own ideas of his very high social
status, with mixed success

•Mrs. Clennam; A cold and bitter woman, Mrs. Clennam has forced
herself to live the life of a reclusive, wheelchair-bound woman as payment
for her sins. Her stubborn iron will arguably makes her the novel's most
terrifying character.

•Flora Finching and Mr. F's Aunt ; Flora, Arthur Clennam's ex-fiancée, and
Mr. F's Aunt, Flora's aunt-in-law, are another great set of paired characters,
in the Pet and Tattycoram mold. Sure, at first glance Flora is a woman past
her prime who is constantly living in the past and trying to get Arthur to
reignite their love affair.
•Flintwinch ; Initially Mrs. Clennam's servant, Flintwinch becomes a
partner in Clennam & Co. He knows Mrs. Clennam's horrible secrets and
uses them to gain power over her and the business.
•Original publication
Little Dorrit was published in nineteen monthly
instalments, each consisting of thirty-two pages
and featuring two illustrations by Phiz. Each
installment cost a shilling, with the exception of
the last, a double issue which cost two shillings.

 •Adaptations
 Little Dorrit has been adapted for the screen
 five times. The first three were produced in 1913,
 1920 and 1934. The 1934 German-language
 adaptation. The fourth, in 1988, is Little Dorrit,
 a UK feature film starring Alec Guinness and
 Derek Jacobi The fifth adaptation is a TV series.
 The series aired between October and
 December 2008 in the U.K. It then aired in
 America on 2009. The series was broadcast in
 Australia, on in June and July 2010.
Poets’ Corner

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Ksenia charles dickens

  • 2.  Biography of Charles Dickens  Little Dorrit
  • 3.  Charles Dickens was born in Portsmouth on 7 th of February, 1812 into a middle class family of civil servant John Dickens who was an open-hearted and kind man. Charles spent his childhood in the atmosphere of love and friendship, though his mother, Elisabeth, was a snobbish, demanding, rather hard and rather silly.  The happiest years were between 1817 and 1822, when John Dickens held a good post in the Chatham Dockyard. It was an enchanted time for little Charles.
  • 4.
  • 5. • The family lived in poverty. Their household consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Dickens, their five children, a servant and James Larmert, a relative by marriage. Charles schooling came to an end and he had to contribute to the family funds. John Larmert found him a job in a warehouse for several shillings a week. • Meanwhile, John Dickens was put into Marshalsea Debtors prison for his debts and his family had to follow him into the prison because the debts were great and they had nobody in London to address for money. They had to stay in prison until Mr. Dickens could pay all his debts
  • 6. • After being released John Dickens decided to take his son away from the warehouse, but his mother didn’t want to lose the money her son was earning. Charles Dickens could never forgive her. When Dickens was fifteen he became a lawyer's clerk. In 1822, having learned shorthand, he secured a full time position in the “Mirror of the Parliament. • At 25, in 1837, Charles Dickens was already famous. It was a successful period of his life: his first son was born, his family moved out of lodgings into a twelve-room house. During the next six years of writing Charles Dickens observed life and attacked debtors, prisons, schools and workhouses.
  • 7. • Charles Dickens was a very thoughtful writer. There was a very important element in his work which is above all the others. It is the power of characterisation. Most of the people in his stories are in a sense “types”, they are based on real life people, though he gave them an independent vitality. • In spite of a large family Dickens couldn’t help travelling. Dickens and his household left England for Italy. They came back home in autumn 1845, with the sixth child born abroad. •He visited Italy and Paris, took and active part in political life of England, started “the Great Expectations”.
  • 8. •Dickens's love of humanity and the inherent goodness of common man opposed to the egoism of the upper classes makes him a central figure in the literature of England in the 19 th century. Charles Dickens undertook several trips in 1864-1869 to Australia, the USA and Ireland. Afterwards he became ill and died on 9 June 1870. He was buried in the Poets’ Corner in Westminster Abbey in London.
  • 9. Little Dorrit is a serial novel by Charles Dickens published originally between 1855 and 1857. It is a work of satire on the shortcomings of the government and society of the period. Much of Dickens' ire is focused upon the institutions of debtors' prisons—in which people who owed money were imprisoned, unable to work, until they have repaid their debts. The representative prison in this case is the Marshalsea where the author's own father had been imprisoned. Most of Dickens' other critiques in this particular novel concern the social safety net: industry and the treatment and safety of workers; the bureaucracy of the British Treasury and the separation of people based on the lack of interaction between the classe
  • 10.
  • 11.  Amy Dorrit; The youngest member of the Dorrit family, Amy is a 20-something woman who looks like an adolescent. She lives her life in totally unacknowledged service to her deluded and hapless family. Her main personality trait is utter selflessness.  Arthur Clennam; The 40-year-old son of a cold, harsh woman and a weak man, Arthur struggles to find a place for himself at a seemingly too-late time of life. After learning a few harsh lessons about love and finance, he gets a happy ending.
  • 12. •William Dorrit; At first called "The Father of the Marshalsea," Dorrit is the oldest prisoner in the debtor's jail, living on selfish pretensions of former grandeur. After he is discovered to be heir to a huge fortune, Dorrit spends the rest of the novel trying to live up to his own ideas of his very high social status, with mixed success •Mrs. Clennam; A cold and bitter woman, Mrs. Clennam has forced herself to live the life of a reclusive, wheelchair-bound woman as payment for her sins. Her stubborn iron will arguably makes her the novel's most terrifying character. •Flora Finching and Mr. F's Aunt ; Flora, Arthur Clennam's ex-fiancée, and Mr. F's Aunt, Flora's aunt-in-law, are another great set of paired characters, in the Pet and Tattycoram mold. Sure, at first glance Flora is a woman past her prime who is constantly living in the past and trying to get Arthur to reignite their love affair. •Flintwinch ; Initially Mrs. Clennam's servant, Flintwinch becomes a partner in Clennam & Co. He knows Mrs. Clennam's horrible secrets and uses them to gain power over her and the business.
  • 13. •Original publication Little Dorrit was published in nineteen monthly instalments, each consisting of thirty-two pages and featuring two illustrations by Phiz. Each installment cost a shilling, with the exception of the last, a double issue which cost two shillings. •Adaptations Little Dorrit has been adapted for the screen five times. The first three were produced in 1913, 1920 and 1934. The 1934 German-language adaptation. The fourth, in 1988, is Little Dorrit, a UK feature film starring Alec Guinness and Derek Jacobi The fifth adaptation is a TV series. The series aired between October and December 2008 in the U.K. It then aired in America on 2009. The series was broadcast in Australia, on in June and July 2010.

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Imagen con fondo quitado(Intermedio)Para reproducir los efectos de imagen en esta diapositiva, lleve a cabo lo siguiente:En la ficha Inicio, en el grupo Diapositivas, haga clic en Diseño y, a continuación, haga clic en En blanco.En la ficha Insertar, en el grupo Imágenes, haga clic en Imagen.En el cuadro de diálogo Insertar imagen, seleccione una imagen y, a continuación, haga clic en Insertar.Seleccione la imagen.En Herramientas deimagen, en la ficha Formato, en el grupo Tamaño, haga clic en el iniciador del cuadro de diálogo Tamaño y posición.En el cuadro de diálogo Formato de imagen, modifique el tamaño o recorte la imagen de modo que el alto quede ajustado a 19,05 cm y el ancho estéajustado a 25,4 cm.Para recortar la imagen, haga clic en Recortar en el panel izquierdo y en el panel derecho, en Posición de recorte, especifique los valores en los cuadros Alto, Ancho, Izquierda y Superior.Para cambiar el tamaño de la imagen, haga clic en Tamaño en el panel izquierdo y, en el panel derecho, en Tamaño y giro, especifique los valores en los cuadros Alto y Ancho.También en Herramientasde imagen, en la ficha Formato, en el grupo Ajustar, haga clic en Color y en Volver a colorear, haga clic en Escala de grises.También en el grupo Ajustar, haga clic en Correcciones y, a continuación, en Brillo y contraste, haga clic en Brillo:-40% Contraste: +20%.En la ficha Inicio, en el grupo Portapapeles, haga clic en la flecha situada a la derecha de Copiar y, a continuación, haga clic en Duplicar.Seleccione la segunda imagen. En la ficha Inicio, en el grupo Dibujo, haga clic en Organizar, vaya a Alinear, y lleve a cabo lo siguiente:Haga clic en Alinear con la diapositiva.Haga clic en Alinear horizontalmente.Haga clic en Alinear verticalmente.En Herramientasde imagen, en la ficha Formato, en el grupo Ajustar, haga clic en Restablecerimagen.También en Herramientasde imagen, en la ficha Formato, en el grupo Tamaño, haga clic en el iniciador del cuadro de diálogo Tamaño y posición.En el cuadro de diálogo Formato de imagen, modifique el tamaño o recorte la imagen para enfocar el tema principal de la imagen.(la imagen de ejemplo está ajustada a 8,99 cm de altoy 8,23 cm de ancho).Para recortar la imagen, haga clic en Recortar en el panel izquierdo y en el panel derecho, en Posición de recorte, especifique los valores en los cuadros Alto, Ancho, Izquierda y Superior.Para cambiar el tamaño de la imagen, haga clic en Tamaño en el panel izquierdo y, en el panel derecho, en Tamaño y giro, especifique los valores en los cuadros Alto y Ancho.También en Herramientasde imagen, en la ficha Formato, en el grupo Ajustar, haga clic en Quitarfondo y, a continuación, lleve a cabo lo siguiente:Para quitar las áreas de fondo adicional de la imagen, en la ficha Eliminacióndel fondo, en el grupo Refinar, haga clic en Marcar las áreas para quitar.Seleccione todas las áreas adicionales que desea quitar.Para conservar las áreas adicionales de la imagen que se hayan quitado, en la ficha Eliminacióndel fondo, en el grupo Refinar, haga clic en Marcar las áreas para mantener.Seleccione todas las áreas adicionales que desea mantener.Haga clic en Mantenercambios en el grupo Cerrar cuando haya terminado.Para reproducir los efectos de formas en esta diapositiva, lleve a cabo lo siguiente:En la ficha Inicio, en el grupo Dibujo, seleccione Rectángulo.En la diapositiva, arrastre para dibujar un rectángulo.Seleccione el rectángulo.También en la ficha Inicio, en el grupo Dibujo, haga clic en el iniciador del cuadro de diálogo Formato de forma.En el cuadro de diálogo Formato de forma, en la ficha Tamaño, especifique el valor 19,05 cm en el cuadro Alto y el valor 10,16 cm en el cuadro Ancho.También en el cuadro de diálogo Formato de forma, en la ficha Relleno, seleccione Rellenodegradado y, a continuación, lleve a cabo lo siguiente:En la lista Tipo, seleccione Lineal.En el cuadro Ángulo, especifique 90°.En Puntos de degradado, haga clic en Agrega un delimitador de degradado o en Quita el delimitador de degradado hasta que aparezcan tres delimitadores en el control deslizante.En Puntos de degradado, personalice los puntos de degradado de la manera siguiente:Seleccione el primer delimitador de la izquierdadel control deslizante y lleve a cabo lo siguiente:En el cuadro Posición, especifique 0%.Haga clic en el botón situado junto a Color y, a continuación, en Colores del tema, haga clic en Negro, Texto 1 (primera fila, segunda opción de la izquierda).En el cuadro Transparencia, especifique 100%.Seleccione el segundo delimitador de la izquierdadel control deslizante y lleve a cabo lo siguiente:En el cuadro Posición, especifique 40%.Haga clic en el botón situado junto a Color, haga clic en Más colores y, a continuación, en el cuadro Colores, en la ficha Personalizar, especifique los valores para el Rojo:47, Verde:91 y Azul:77.En el cuadro Transparencia, especifique 0%.Seleccione el tercer delimitador de la izquierdadel control deslizante y lleve a cabo lo siguiente:En el cuadro Posición, especifique 100%.Haga clic en el botón situado junto a Color y, a continuación, en Colores del tema, haga clic en Negro, Texto 1 (primera fila, segunda opción de la izquierda).En el cuadro Transparencia, especifique 90%.También en el cuadro de diálogo Formatode forma, en la ficha Colorde línea, seleccione Sinlínea.Seleccione la segunda imagen.En la ficha Inicio, en el grupo Dibujo, haga clic en Organizar y, a continuación, haga clic en Traer al frente.Para reproducir los efectos de texto en esta diapositiva, lleve a cabo lo siguiente:En la ficha Insertar, en el grupo Texto, haga clic en Cuadrode texto y, a continuación, arrastre el puntero en la diapositiva para dibujar el cuadro de texto.Escriba el texto en el cuadro de texto y, a continuación, seleccione el texto. En la ficha Inicio, en el grupo Fuente, haga lo siguiente:En la lista Fuente, haga clic en Calisto MT.En la lista Tamañode fuente, haga clic en 36 pt. Haga clic en Colorde fuente y, a continuación, en Colores del tema haga clic en Blanco, Fondo 1 (primera fila, primera opción de la izquierda).Coloque el texto sobre la última parte transparente del degradado.