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David Copperfield, the eighth novel by Charles Dickens, was called his "favorite child" and was published in 20 parts and months between 1849 and 185o. The book is narrated in the first person, and many of the author's own life experiences are incorporated. Dickens was born at the bottom of society, and his grandfather and grandmother worked as servants at Lord Crewe's house for a long time.
His father, John, was a clerk in the Naval Quartermaster's Department, and when Dickens was twelve years old, he was unable to repay his debts, and his wife and children were sent to Marcoral Debtor's Prison with him. At that time, Dickens was working as a child laborer in the Warren Black Shoe Polish Workshop on the banks of the Thames, and his sister Fanny, who was two years older than him, was studying at the Royal Academy, and they were the only two in the family who did not live in prison. After his father's release from prison, Dickens attended Wellington School, but soon dropped out permanently due to his family's poverty, and at the age of fifteen he entered a law firm as an apprentice.
Later, he learned shorthand and was hired as a record taker by the London Civil Lawyers Council. Between 1831 and 1832, Dickens served as a parliamentary correspondent for the Parliamentary Mirror and then for the True Sun. These experiences helped him to embark on a writing path later in life.
He had less than four years of schooling in his life, and his success was due to his genius, hard work, and hard work. In 1836, Dickens finally became famous for his feature-length "The Pickwick Papers", when he was only twenty-four years old.
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**The background is in 1848, when Vanney died of tuberculosis, Charles Dickens sadly discovered that of all his siblings, they were the only ones who were close in talent and interest. After Fanny's death, Charles Dickens wrote a 7,000-word memoir about the difficult childhood they spent together. Charles Dickens wrote this memoir to write an autobiographical**.
The protagonist in his ** has many names before he finally comes up with "David Copperfield". When Foster heard it, he immediately cheered, because the initial letter DC it is the author's initial letter inversion. So the name of the protagonist was decided.
In David Copperfield, Dickens uses David's tragic experience to arouse deep sympathy while criticizing the loss of humanity and moral degradation, nobility, integrity, and other good qualities in society that are embodied in many of David Copperfield's characters. This exploration of human nature and moral uplift in Dickens's work is quite broad and profound, both in terms of the ideological tone of the work as a whole and in the characterization of the work.
The protagonist, David Copperfield, is a typical image of a kind, generous, upright, hardworking, and positive intellectual. He is kind, sincere, intelligent, hardworking, self-reliant, persevering and positive, full of confidence in adversity, redoubling his efforts in good times, and ultimately achieving career success and family happiness. His character has also matured and perfected after various trials, and finally he has achieved success in his career and happiness in his family.
He is sincere, kind, hard-working, unwavering in every difficulty, confident and hopeful at all times, and the author of moral sentiments, Charles Dickens, can be seen in this character.
The work depicts the realities of British social life from multiple perspectives, the character of the protagonists and the significance of their personal struggles. David Copperfield was an intellectual with a humanitarian spirit and bourgeois democratic ideas. The author describes how he grew from an orphan to a bourgeois-democratic writer with a humanistic spirit.
Through positive images such as David Copperfield, the work highlights their hard-working, kind, upright, self-reliant character and golden heart, and celebrates the virtues of the middle and lower classes of society. This character embodies the moral ideals of Charles Dickens.
Righteous , sensitive, innocent and diligent.
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