During the Victorian age, crime was an inescapable part of social problems, and Dickens, being the greatest chronicler of that period, fictionalized and commented upon the outstanding topical issues of his day. The present book, entitled Criminals and Villains of Charles Dickens, delineates the dark labyrinths of the criminals who stood for the pinnacle of his creative imagination in his novels, Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, A Tale of Two Cities, and Great Expectations, which supplanted Dickens’s image as the Santa Claus of Victorian society with another Dickens, who was humourless and understood the dark souls and psychic labyrinths of the Victorian society.
Muses and Measures
This book is required reading for humanistic disciplines. Too often, scholars present theories without knowing how to test them empirically. In an engaging way, the authors teach statistics, leading students through projects to analyze their own gathered data.
