A Christmas Carol - Themes - FAMILY

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GCSE English Language Mind Map on A Christmas Carol - Themes - FAMILY, created by Jude Luce on 24/04/2016.
Jude Luce
Mind Map by Jude Luce, updated more than 1 year ago
Jude Luce
Created by Jude Luce about 8 years ago
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Resource summary

A Christmas Carol - Themes - FAMILY
  1. Dickens designed the novel for holiday readers - to spread good cheer and festivity.
    1. For Victorians, Christmas was a time of national unity and common humanity; the Cratchit family are a good example of this - spending time together - metaphor for whole nation being together at Christmas.
      1. The best employers in the novel, for example, Mr. Fezziwig, treated their employees like an extended family- with respect and care.
        1. Christmas was about bringing people together - sense of collective unity, shared happiness. Contrast - Scrooge - alone - "as solitary as an oyster".
          1. Cratchit family - example of deserving poor - grateful for the little they have - Victorian Idea.
            1. Ebeneezer Scrooge, Mrs. Dilber - undeserving poor.
            2. FAMILY PEOPLE - good, kind, caring, philanthropists.
              1. LONERS - selfish because they don't have anyone to look out for.
              2. The importance of family plays a big part in Scrooge's transformation - rebuilds relationship with Fred.
                1. Scrooge is cured as a character by the end of the novel - becomes family orientated again.
                  1. Novel celebrates family rituals at Christmas - key scene: eating dinner together (Cratchits). Contrast with cheer.
                    1. Christmas dinner is celebrated because it was the only time of year the poor could look forward to.
                    2. Dickens offers hint that if Scrooge's family had been more unified - perhaps he may have turned out a better man. Ghost of Christmas Present shows Scrooge as being a solitary child.
                      1. Ghost of Christmas Past reminds Scrooge that Fred is his last link to his childhood - a time when love was present.
                        1. Dickens suggests that having a family can provide a sense of comfort in the face of death. Scrooge's alteration was partly due to the sight of his own unmourned corpse - "with not a man, a women or a child, to say that he was kind to me in this or that.
                          1. Festivities and Christmas rituals are represented as invaluable - to keep families together, e.g. helping the Cratchits cope with their troubles.
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