Raparin Journal of Humanities

University of Raparin

Understanding Violence in Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities
PDF4

Keywords

Charles Dickens, Violence, The French Revolution, A Tale of Two Cities

How to Cite

Understanding Violence in Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities. (2019). Raparin Journal of Humanities (RJH) of the University of Raparin, 7(1), 38-48. https://journal.raparinuni2024.org/index.php/JUR/article/view/Paper%204

Abstract

This paper, Understanding Violence in Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities, deals with violence in its various forms in Charles Dickens’ novel, A Tale of Two Cities. The novel recounts the French Revolution of 1789. In the novel, Dickens portrays a terrifying scene of blood and brutality. Violence appears in different forms. Critics have paid attention to Charles Dickens’ own fear of a similar revolution in England. The paper attempts to find the substance of that fear. The paper will discuss the three forms of violence in Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities; namely, violence as an inherent part of the French Revolution; violence committed by the crowds or mobs, and the evil that rises and grows as the Revolution continues. It will be argued that Dickens’ depiction of the crowd and mob behavior in A Tale of Two Cities captures the potential which is in the mentality of any crowd to grow violent. That is, a seemingly innocent start could lead to evil. A socio-psychological approach will also be consulted to analyze violence in the novel; violence as part of the revolution; violence committed by the mobs, and finally how the revolutionary masses turn evil.

PDF4

References

Baumeister, F. (1999) Evil: Inside Human Violence and Cruelty. W.H. Freeman and Company Ltd, New York.

Carlyle, T. (1885). Chartism. John B. Alden, New York.

Cooper, A. and Brooke E. Penn. (2008). "Crowds and Violence: Negotiating with Mobs." Journal of Police Crisis Negotiations. 9.1. Pp. 3-33. Web. 18 September. 2019.

Dickens, Charles. (2008). A Tale of Two Cities. Oxford World’s Classics. Ed. Andrew Sanders. Oxford University Press, New York.

Jones, S. (2008). "The Redemptive Power of Violence? Carlyle, Marx and Dickens." History Workshop Journal. 65.1.Pp. 1-22. Web. 20 June 2019.

Kucich, J. (1980). The Purity of Violence: “A Tale of Two Cities.” Dickens Studies Annual, 8, pp.119–137.

Postmes, T. and Spears, R. (1998). "Deindividuation and Antinormative Behavior: A Meta-Analysis."Psychology Bulletin. 123.3. Pp. 238-259. Web. 10 August 2019.