Charles Dickens The relevance of Charles Dickens’ dystopian England to the present day world is quite mystifying. If one is literature-savvy, the Dickensian world is a source of perpetual fascination where his caricatures take the stage to enthral the audience. As for the popularity of the author, the Victorians and the generations to come later differed little in applauding his genius. His biographies sell like hot cakes even today, as did his novels in his own day. People used to wait anxiously for each instalment throughout the UK and even in the US. When the instalment copies of The Old Curiosity Shop used to arrive on the docks in the US, people would holler from the shore, “Is little Nell dead?” He was a celebrity in his own day and kept his status intact even after the passage of one-and-a-half century after his death.
Dickens’ world is no utopia, rather it is a dystopia: the real England of the 19th century where squalor, child labour and class stratification potentially vitiated society. Unlike Henry Fielding’s stock characters and Jane Austen’s parish-dwelling beauties anxious to get married, Dickens’ characters were very life like and real. The most popular of them were full of eccentricities and oddities; hence, aptly termed caricatures.
His craftsmanship in sketching caricatures is second to none as his literary career skyrocketed soon after the publication of Sketches by Boz — a collection of 56 sketches concerning London scenes and people, published between 1833 and 1836, and illustrated by George Cruikshank. The Pickwick Papers (1836-37) came soon after and then he never looked back. By then, he had become the maestro of his art. We don’t find Micawbers, Pumblechooks and Fagins afterwards in English literature. He immortalised these caricatures with his marvellous craftsmanship which were a source of hilarious comedy for his Victorian readers through their ‘queer’ behaviour and oddities.
Even after more than 200 years of his birth, one finds that Dickensian times are still relevant especially in the Third World
Charles John Huffam Dickens was a Londoner and the city was his obsession, so much so that it appeared to have a semblance of a character in his novels. He dwelled well in the city and explored it profusely in his novels. He described London so vividly in his works that even one of his hostile critics, Walter Bagehot, was compelled to comment in The National Review (October 1858) that “He [Dickens] describes London like a special correspondent for posterity”. Dickens had a difficult childhood, when his extravagant father was imprisoned for non-payment of debts. He had to work in a blacking factory at the age of 12, which left a deep imprint on his mind. Mr Micawber of David Copperfield is a caricature of Dickens’ own father John Dickens, as Micawber had to face imprisonment in the novel on the same charges. His child characters like Pip, Oliver and the young David Copperfield were crafted so well that their stories also served as children’s classics.
As Dickens’ biographer, Claire Tomalin, remarks, Dickens has an immediacy which children love. This immediacy and vivid description is, in fact, the result of psychosomatic trauma which Dickens suffered throughout his life due to his ordeal of child labour at a blacking factory. Sigmund Freud categorised David Copperfield as his favourite book which is an autobiographical novel. In fact, Dickens appears to be a forerunner to Freud as far as child psychology is concerned. Tomalin remarks aptly in Dickens’ biography Charles Dickens: A life, “Before Freud or any of the child experts arrived on the scene, the voice of childhood was truly rendered by Dickens out of his own experience, and out of imagination, since the earliest chapters of the book [David Copperfield] are purely imaginary.”