English, asked by pritisahare, 7 months ago

suggest ways and means to eradicate poverty and child labour from society on the basis of the story little match girl in 100 words ​

Answers

Answered by gopikarevathi2006
2

Answer:

Child Labour

We say that children are the future of the nation. If it is true, I would say we are callous about the future of the country. We use them as cheap labour everywhere. They are seen working not only in restaurants and shops but even in hazardous industries. They can be seen as being used as bonded labour. Much is said and written about these children but there is little which is actually done for them. There is a strong need for banning child labour completely. To make it a success, the parents below poverty-line should be given the incentive to send their children to school. The teachers who teach these children well should also be awarded.

Answered by saniya21082005
4

Answer:

Here's your answer...

The Cruelty of Poverty Theme Icon

In his stories, Hans Christian Andersen often highlights the plight of the poor during the Industrial Revolution, with a particular interest in how this tumultuous period impacted the lives of children. In “The Little Match Girl,” he focuses on the titular little girl as she struggles for warmth while out selling matches in the bitter cold of New Year’s Eve. The story’s morbid ending (the girl dies from exposure after she uses all of her matches to warm and comfort herself) is presented as a welcome reprieve from the continued suffering of her existence as a child laborer. In portraying the innocent girl’s helpless, futile attempts to escape her difficult circumstances, Andersen shows that poverty is brutal, inescapable, and ultimately a worse fate than death.

By emphasizing the contrast between the little girl’s bleak, hopeless surroundings and her imaginary visions of warmth and nourishment, Andersen draws attention to the stark divide between the lives of the poor and the upper classes. When the girl burns the matchsticks (her only source of income), she finds that their flames spark imaginary visions of comforts like a “big iron stove,” a “table spread with a damask cloth and set with the finest porcelain,” and a Christmas tree with “thousands of candles.” These are comforts that are available to the wealthier people who surround the little girl in the city, but she can only access them in her imagination.

While these visions provide the little girl with emotional comfort, they don’t change the harsh reality of her life. The city’s callous fellow inhabitants—from the reckless carriage drivers “driving along awfully fast” to the little boy who steals one of the girl’s slippers for himself—treat her with astounding cruelty and disregard. Furthermore, Andersen’s characterization of the girl as being “cowed by life” extends to her home life; the drafty attic her family lives in is described as being “almost as cold as the street,” and her father is so abusive that she won’t return home even to escape the harsh cold. While holiday stories are traditionally lighthearted and feature luxurious celebrations and feasts, here Andersen portrays the comfort and joy of the holidays as things the little girl cannot access. The fact that the little girl can’t enjoy something as basic as a warm room or a meal on New Year’s Eve shows just how harrowing her life is compared to the average middle- or upper-class child.

Due to the little girl’s tragic circumstances, Andersen presents death as a worthy alternative to a life spent in poverty, because it allows the girl to be free of her suffering and live with God. Andersen seems to suggest, then, that poverty is unreasonably harsh and incredibly difficult to overcome, and that death is often the only lasting escape. Among her visions of the warm stove and holiday feast, the little girl also imagines that her beloved grandmother has returned from death to be with her. The characterization of the grandmother as “the only person who had ever loved or been kind to the child” implies that the girl’s suffering has been overlooked or even directly perpetuated by those around her. As a young, innocent child, she is truly powerless to overcome the powerful societal forces working against her, and her poverty also leaves her physically vulnerable to the natural world, as she slowly freezes to death on the street.

With nobody to help her and no more matches with which to help herself, death is the only possible escape from the little girl’s destitute circumstances, since it is only in death that she will be with God in a place “where there is neither cold nor hunger nor fear.” Given that the little girl grapples with all of these perils in life, Andersen suggests that poverty (particularly when suffered by children) is unjust and unbearable, and that a peaceful death is ultimately preferable to a life of barely scraping by.

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