Importance of the settings in The Signal-Mans by Charles Dickens, The Grave by the Handpost by Thomas Hardy and The Red Room by H.G.Wells

Title: Importance of the settings in The Signal-Mans by Charles Dickens, The Grave by the Handpost by Thomas Hardy and The Red Room by H.G.Wells
Category: /Literature
Details: Words: 3535 | Pages: 13 (approximately 235 words/page)
Importance of the settings in The Signal-Mans by Charles Dickens, The Grave by the Handpost by Thomas Hardy and The Red Room by H.G.Wells
Using your reading of three nineteenth century stories about ghostly and mysterious events, explain the importance of the settings in the stories. For each story you should 1) Explain briefly what happens in the story 2) Look in detail at A. The Descriptions of places in the story B. The Historical time when the story is set C. The Social class of the main characters In this essay, I have looked at "The Red Room" by H.…showed first 75 words of 3535 total…
You are viewing only a small portion of the paper.
Please login or register to access the full copy.
…showed last 75 words of 3535 total…seem to use darkness, dark places and shadows to create atmosphere. They also all contrast old superstitions with new, progressive or rational ideas. Because of the extreme importance of class during the nineteenth century, the ideas of class are evident in all of the stories. I think that Dickens' "The Signal-Man" uses setting most effectively, because it ties the whole story together, aswell as creating a very peculiar location and an interesting metaphor of class.

Need a custom written paper?