Social Sciences, asked by dinesh2141551, 1 year ago

explain the theme of charles dickens ''Hard times''.

Answers

Answered by Yuvrajpaul
0
The Mechanization of Human Beings

Hard Times suggests that nineteenth-century England’s overzealous adoption of industrialization threatens to turn human beings into machines by thwarting the development of their emotions and imaginations. This suggestion comes forth largely through the actions of Gradgrind and his follower, Bounderby: as the former educates the young children of his family and his school in the ways of fact, the latter treats the workers in his factory as emotionless objects that are easily exploited for his own self-interest. In Chapter 5 of the first book, the narrator draws a parallel between the factory Hands and the Gradgrind children—both lead monotonous, uniform existences, untouched by pleasure. Consequently, their fantasies and feelings are dulled, and they become almost mechanical themselves.

The mechanizing effects of industrialization are compounded by Mr. Gradgrind’s philosophy of rational self-interest. Mr. Gradgrind believes that human nature can be measured, quantified, and governed entirely by rational rules. Indeed, his school attempts to turn children into little machines that behave according to such rules. Dickens’s primary goal in Hard Timesis to illustrate the dangers of allowing humans to become like machines, suggesting that without compassion and imagination, life would be unbearable. Indeed, Louisa feels precisely this suffering when she returns to her father’s house and tells him that something has been missing in her life, so much so that she finds herself in an unhappy marriage and may be in love with someone else. While she does not actually behave in a dishonorable way, since she stops her interaction with Harthouse before she has a socially ruinous affair with him, Louisa realizes that her life is unbearable and that she must do something drastic for her own survival. Appealing to her father with the utmost honesty, Louisa is able to make him realize and admit that his philosophies on life and methods of child rearing are to blame for Louisa’s detachment from others.

Answered by Ajeesha15
0

\huge\mathfrak\red{Heya\:Mate}

\huge{\boxed{\bold{ANSWER}}}

✔️Charles Dickens wrote about the terrible effects of industrialisation on people's lives.

✔️In this novel, it describes about a fictitious industrial town called Coketown.

✔️He described this town as as a grim place full of machinery, smoking chimneys, river polluted purple and building that all looked the same.

✔️Here workers known as “hands”, as if they had no identity other than as operator of machines.

✔️ In this novel,Dickens criticised not just the greed for profits but also the ideas that reduced human beings into simple instrument of production.

\large{\bold{HOPE \:IT \:HELPS \:YOU!!!}}

Similar questions