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1993 Cuisine and Culture of Mexico - Research Paper Example Notwithstanding, Mexican individuals have a place with different various soci...
Sunday, December 1, 2019
Oliver Essays - English-language Films, British Films,
  Oliver    Twist And Anti Semism  Charles Dickens being anti-Semitic when portraying the character Fagin as  "the Jew", in his classic story Oliver Twist, or was he merely  painting an accurate portrait of the 19th Century Jew in England? Some critics  seem to believe so. Though there are no indications of neither anti-Semitic nor  racist slurs throughout the story, Dickens' image turned out to follow the path  of his time and place in history. The result is an enlightened picture of    Victorian England's image of the Jew. The attitude towards Jews and Jewishness  in 19th Century England demonstrates that Dickens was a man of his time. His  attitude reflected the common British belief that Jews were villainous thieves.    Fagin, a thief, is described by Dickens as "a very old shriveled Jew, whose  villainous and repulsive face was obscured by a quantity of matted red  hair"(Dickens 87). This common depiction of the Jew was accompanied by the  stereotype that they had big noses and lured orphaned children into their filthy  dens and turned them into derelicts. He was a thief because he did not have any  skills, nor was he welcome anywhere. On the other hand, to describe Fagin in any  other light would have to give the impression that Jews just might be humans  after all. In reading this story, I discovered Fagin to be somewhat likeable and  misunderstood. Though revolting to look at, having a repulsive disposition, and  having manners and hygiene left to be desired I could not help but to feel sorry  for the old guy. All he wanted to have was security in his old age. For example,  when Fagin sees Oliver looking at him while admiring his treasures, Fagin asks  the boy if he had seen any of his pretty things. Oliver tells him that he did.  "Ah!" said the Jew, turning rather pale. "They- are mine, Oliver;  my little property. All I have to live upon, in my old age. The folks call me a  miser, my dear. Only a miser, that's all" (Dickens 1961: 91). I also found    Fagin to be very charming in instances, almost likeable and having some  redeeming qualities. Another example of Fagin's humanity is seen in the way he  treats Oliver. Although Oliver plays a totally utilitarian role to Fagin, he  becomes protective of him, even though the motives are purely selfish. When not  being watched, Fagin has great self-control, even under duress. He is always  cautioning Sikes against violence. There are some signs that Fagin still has a  shade of humanity left in his perverted character. Several times throughout the  story he exhibits some kindness towards Oliver. He checks his motives before he  acts. Though the reader is still at bay with his actions, he still seems to have  some sort of a conscience. It could be argued that Fagin and Oliver are somewhat  similar. Though the reader does not see this at first, more in depth reading  reveals that Oliver and Fagin mirror each other in who and what they are.    Oliver, a boy without a home, Fagin, "The Jew", without a country.    Fagin, in fact, is not seen as an Englishman. He is Jewish, which is a race all  its own. Fagin is the outsider, unlike Oliver. His Jewishness places him at even  more a disadvantage than Oliver's orphaned status. Both characters echo each  other in asking for more; they are placed in oppositions so that for Oliver to  claim his rightful place in society, Fagin must die. Dickens' stereotypical  association of Fagin with a class of criminal perceived by him as almost  invariably Jewish is based on a particular awareness of the commonly accepted  wicked practices of this kind of Jew. Dickens' stereotypical association of    Fagin with a class of criminal perceived by him as almost invariably Jewish is  based on a particular awareness of the commonly accepted wicked practices of  this kind of Jew. In Dickens and his Jewish Characters, Dickens answers a letter  from a Jewess woman who wrote him concerned with the fact that Dickens may be in  fact an anti-Semitic and wanted to allow Dickens to reply as to why the  characterization of Fagin. His response was that "Fagin in Oliver Twist is  a Jew because it unfortunately was true, of the time to which that story refers,  that the class of criminal almost invariably was a Jew" (Dickens 1918:9).    Critical reviews have been inclined to argue that Fagin is only a Jew in no more  than name. "His main claim to Jewishness", contends critic Harry    Stone, "is the fact that    
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