enq48.txt 9.7 KB

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  1. Utilitarianism
  2. Quadruped. Graminivorous. Forty teeth, namely
  3. twenty-four grinders, four eye-teeth, and twelve incisive.
  4. Sheds coat in spring...... A perfect example of a product of
  5. utilitarian education, Bitzer defines a horse off the top of his
  6. head in a split second. Utilitarianism is the assumption that
  7. human beings act in a way that highlights their own self
  8. interest. It is based on factuality and leaves little room for
  9. imagination. Dickens provides three vivid examples of this
  10. utilitarian logic in Hard Times. The first; Mr. Thomas
  11. Gradgrind, one of the main characters in the book, was the
  12. principal of a school in Coketown. He was a firm believer in
  13. utilitarianism and instilled this philosophy into the students at
  14. the school from a very young age, as well as his own
  15. children. Mr. Josiah Bounderby was also a practitioner of
  16. utilitarianism, but was more interested in the profit that
  17. stemmed from it. At the other end of the perspective, a
  18. group of circus members, who are the total opposite of
  19. utilitarians, are added by Dickens to provide a sharp
  20. contrast from the ideas of Mr. Bounderby and Mr.
  21. Gradgrind.
  22. Thomas Gradgrind Sr., a father of five children, has lived his
  23. life by the book and never strayed from his philosophy that
  24. life is nothing more than facts and statistics. He has
  25. successfully incorporated this belief into the school system of
  26. Coketown, and has tried his best to do so with his own
  27. children. The educators see children as easy targets just
  28. waiting to be filled with information. They did not consider,
  29. however, the children’s need for fiction, poetry, and other
  30. fine arts that are used to expand children’s minds, all of
  31. which are essential today in order to produce well-rounded
  32. human beings through the educational process. One has to
  33. wonder how different the story would be if Gradgrind did
  34. not run the school. How can you give a utilitarian man such
  35. as Gradgrind such power over a town? I do like how
  36. Dickens structures the book to make one ask obvious
  37. questions such as these. Dickens does not tell us much about
  38. the success of the other students of the school besides
  39. Bitzer, who is fairly successful on paper, but does not have
  40. the capacity as a person to deal with life’s everyday
  41. struggles. Gradgrinds two oldest children, Tom and Louisa,
  42. are examples of how this utilitarian method failed miserably.
  43. These children were never given the opportunity to think for
  44. themselves, experience fun things in life, or even use their
  45. imaginations. True, they are smart people in the factual sense
  46. but do not have the street smarts to survive. Tom is a young
  47. man who, so fed up with his father’s strictness and
  48. repetition, revolts against him and leaves home to work in
  49. Mr. Bounderby’s bank. Tom, now out from under his
  50. fathers wing, he begins to drink and gamble heavily.
  51. Eventually, to get out of a deep gambling debt, he robs a
  52. bank and is forced to flee the area. When Bitzer realizes that
  53. Tom has robbed the bank and catches him, Mr. Gradgrind
  54. begs him to let Tom go, reminding him of all of the hard
  55. work that was put on him while at the school. Ironically
  56. Bitzer, using the tools of factuality that he had learned in
  57. Gradgrinds school, replies that the school was paid for, but
  58. it is now over and he owes nothing more. I think this is
  59. extremely funny how, at a time of need, Gradgrind’s
  60. educational theory has backfired in his face. I think Dickens
  61. put this irony in as a comical device but also to show how
  62. ineffective the utilitarian method of teaching is. Louisa, unlike
  63. Tom, does get along with her father. She even agrees to
  64. marry Mr. Bounderby, even though she does not love him,
  65. in order to please her father. She stays in the marriage with
  66. Bounderby, and goes about life normally and factually, until
  67. she is faced with a dilemma and panics. Mr. James
  68. Harthouse, a young, good looking guy, is attracted to Louisa
  69. and deceivingly draws her attraction to him. She does not
  70. know what to do since she has never had feelings of her
  71. own before. Her father never gave her the opportunity to
  72. think for herself, or even love someone. This is why Louisa
  73. goes frantic and ends up crying in her fathers lap. She has
  74. always been told what to do and what is ‘right’, and now
  75. even her father is stumped. For the first time in the whole
  76. novel, Mr. Gradgrind strays from the utilitarian philosophy
  77. and shows compassion for his daughter and her feelings.
  78. One must think that he is beginning to doubt his philosophy
  79. after seeing it backfire in his face more than once.
  80. Josiah Bounderby is another prime example of utilitarianism.
  81. He is one of the wealthiest people in Coketown; owning a
  82. bank and a factory, but is not really a likable person. His
  83. utilitarian philosophy is similar to Gradgrinds in the sense that
  84. factuality is the single most important virtue that one could
  85. posses. Mr. Bounderby maintained throughout the story his
  86. utilitarian views, which basically stated that nothing else is
  87. important besides profit. Being the owner of both a factory
  88. and a bank, Bounderby employs many workers, yet seems
  89. to offer them no respect at all. He refers to the factory
  90. workers as Hands, because that is all they are to him.
  91. Bounderby often states that workers are all looking for
  92. venison, turtle soup, and a golden spoon, while all they
  93. really want is decent working conditions and fair wage for
  94. their work. He is not concerned about his employees as
  95. human beings, but how much their hands can produce during
  96. the workday, resulting with money in his pocket. When one
  97. of his workers, Stephen Blackpool came to Bounderby’s
  98. house asking for advice about his bad marriage, he was
  99. treated as inferior just because of his social status. Dickens
  100. portrayed the scene as one in which Blackpool was on a
  101. level five steps below Bounderby and his associates because
  102. he was a lowly worker who was obviously much less
  103. educated than them. It almost seemed like they would not
  104. even take him seriously because he was such. Blackpool
  105. was told that he could not divorce his wife because it would
  106. be against the laws of England. Later in the book,
  107. Bounderby divorces his wife. This shows that wealth played
  108. a large role in determining the social classes that people
  109. were in and the privileges they had. This was definitely unfair
  110. but the social classes were structured in a way which
  111. allowed those who had money to look down upon those
  112. who were less fortunate. Generally, those who were not
  113. well-educated did not have any money, while the
  114. well-educated ones such as Bounderby and Gradgrind were
  115. wealthy. The people who knew the factual information,
  116. (utilitarians) were successful, while those who did not were
  117. reduced to working in the factories of the utilitarians.
  118. Dickens paints a vivid picture of this inequality between
  119. social classes and shows he does not care much for it. It is
  120. fairly easy to see that Dickens holds a contempt for
  121. Bounderby and the utilitarian philosophy he carries. The
  122. book details the philosophy, then shows how miserably it
  123. failed. How much different would their lives be if the town
  124. was not run by utilitarians.
  125. Dickens cleverly added in circus people as a contrast to the
  126. utilitarian approach to life. The circus people could be called
  127. the total opposite of utilitarianism. If one element of the book
  128. stands out in my mind, it would be this one. The circus
  129. people are simple, open-minded human beings whose goal
  130. in life is to make people laugh. Dickens portrays them as a
  131. step up from the Hands but still close to the bottom in the
  132. social structure. These people are hated by Gradgrind,
  133. Bounderby and other utilitarians because they represent
  134. everything that is shunned in utilitarianism such as love,
  135. imagination, and humor. Sissy Jupe, the daughter of a circus
  136. man, was taken in by the Gradgrinds to live in their home.
  137. She is representative of the circus people with her innocence
  138. and free-will, qualities which are lacking in the lives of the
  139. people around her. Just by her presence, her goodness rubs
  140. off on the people around her, although it is too late for most
  141. of them. Even after numerous attempts to force utilitarianism
  142. into her by Mr. Gradgrind and his school, she is still the
  143. fun-loving girl that she always was because she grew up
  144. living with normal people who thought for themselves and
  145. loved each other. She influenced these qualities on the
  146. youngest Gradgrind daughter Jane, who led a much more
  147. enjoyable and fulfilling life than her older sister Louisa
  148. because of those influences. Jane is not spoken of much until
  149. the end of the book but I like the way Dickens showed the
  150. effects of the utilitarian lifestyle as opposed to the
  151. non-utilitarian lifestyle. The utilitarians ultimately ended with a
  152. great downfall because their narrow-minds could not endure
  153. the pressures that life can impose on oneself. The people
  154. that did not fall victim to the utilitarian trap were able to live
  155. their lives happily and freely, able to love, laugh, and use
  156. their imagination; which is the way life ought to be lived.
  157. Dickens obviously had a definitive opinion of the way life
  158. should be lived and did an excellent job of depicting it. His
  159. method was somewhat indirect in the sense that he worked
  160. backwards to get his point across, but turned out to be very
  161. effective as the story progressed. Most of the story revolved
  162. around utilitarianism and the study of cold hard facts, but
  163. when the character flaws began to surface as a result of this
  164. philosophy, Dickens is quick to emphasize them. One
  165. actually sees the main character of the book and firm
  166. supporter of utilitarianism, Mr. Thomas Gradgrind,
  167. experience the faults of his practice and begin to stray from
  168. it. Now, after watching his life fall apart, maybe he wishes he
  169. were in the circus.
  170. <br><br>
  171. Words: 1679