Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Victorian Education system as presented in Hard Times :: English Literature
The Victorian Education system as presented in Hard Times    From the early beginnings of Hard Times, we can tell that this novel  was originally intended to shock those reading it. The education that  these children receive is harsh and designed to stem any feelings of  self-opinion. When Gradgrind interrogated 'girl number 20', he proved  that their education was more strict and when he later humiliated her  when he asked her to describe a horse, he proved that the Victorian  education system was solely based on fact and allowed no room for it  to be questioned.    This was even the case in such incidents as where Sissy states that  she would like flowers on her carpets. Gradgrinds' wish to outlaw  fancy in her thoughts, mean that at some points during the dialogue,  Gradgrind can begin to sound absurd in his words. Dickens heavily  objects to the mechanical way of teaching in Gradgrind's utilitarian  school. As early as in the second chapter the reader notices that the  facts taught in this kind of school have no use at all in normal life.  Sissy, with her natural understanding of a horse contradicts the cold  definition of a horse by Bitzer: 'Quadruped ....'.    What makes that situation worse is that later on, Gradgrind, who takes  charge of Sissy's education, forces her from learning on her ability  to comprehend that she cannot believe in what she wishes.    They are stifled in their environment, prisoners of a world of  utilitarianism. Gradgrind's school is very plain and bare, Dickens  describing it as a 'monotonous vault', and being 'intensely  whitewashed'. For pupils having to learn in this kind of environment  would be extremely boring, and no encouragement is given to exercise    					    
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