High Society's Manners in Dickens's Works: The Anatomy of Hypocrisy, Indolence, and Social Irresponsibility
Introduction: Dickens as a Social Anthropologist of the Elite
In Charles Dickens's works, the upper class (aristocracy and gentry) is portrayed not as a backdrop, but as an object of intense and often merciless analysis. A writer who emerged from the lower classes and encountered the degrading system of patronage created a gallery of types revealing the moral and social dysfunction of British elite in the first half of the 19th century. His criticism is not directed at the aristocracy as a class per se, but at its degenerate morals: parasitism, spiritual emptiness, cruel indifference to the sufferings of the poor, and belief in one's own exceptionalism based solely on birth and wealth. Dickens exposes the upper class as a closed system producing moral and social monsters.
1. The Cult of the External and Rituals as a Substitute for Substance
Dickens notes the aristocracy's pathological preoccupation with form over content.
Ritualized indolence. The upper class lives in a closed circle of meaningless social rituals: visits, receptions, balls, and gossip. In "Bleak House," Lady Dedlock, the embodiment of a social lioness, spends her life in "elegant boredom," her days are scheduled to the minute but devoid of any meaning except maintaining status. Her famous "I'm tired of all this" is a sign of an existential vacuum.
Fetishization of manners and titles. Speech, gestures, and the ability to conduct oneself are more important than kindness or intelligence. Characters like Sir Leicester Dedlock ("Bleak House") or Mrs. General ("Little Dorrit") are walking compendiums of etiquette, behind which lies complete emotional and moral sterility. Mrs. General teaches "to reign" and "to abstain," substituting morality with etiquette.
2. Parasitism and Economic Irresponsibility
Dickens mercilessly shows how the aristocracy exists at the expense of others, without experiencing ...
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