"Great Expectations" - Charles Dickens - Atmosphere/ambience and how it is developed (notes easliy converted to essay)
Title: "Great Expectations" - Charles Dickens - Atmosphere/ambience and how it is developed (notes easliy converted to essay)
Category: /Business & Economy/Management
Details: Words: 1225 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
"Great Expectations" - Charles Dickens - Atmosphere/ambience and how it is developed (notes easliy converted to essay)
Category: /Business & Economy/Management
Details: Words: 1225 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
Speech
* The speech of the narrator (Pip) and the characters affects the atmosphere of the story greatly. For example, a cold tone is used in Estella's speech to develop a harsh atmosphere. The tone of voice reflects the mood of the scene and often the atmosphere changes as the tone of the narrator and that of the character changes.
* When the Pip is under certain circumstances, the narrator says things in a different way: the
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tone or mood of a given scene. The atmosphere is developed from the setting, the speech of the characters and the tone of the narrator, some motifs, and names or name-phrases.
The setting is the most important part of the developing of the atmosphere of a scene. The setting gives the time, weather and location or description of the location of the scene, which is important in the development of the atmosphere in Victorian novels.