Dickens, Hogarth and artistic perception: the case of Nicholas NicklebyMangham, A. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3585-7162 (2017) Dickens, Hogarth and artistic perception: the case of Nicholas Nickleby. Dickens Studies Annual, 48. pp. 59-78. ISSN 0084-9812 Full text not archived in this repository. It is advisable to refer to the publisher's version if you intend to cite from this work. See Guidance on citing. Official URL: http://dickens.ucsc.edu/resources/dsa/index.html Abstract/SummaryThis essay considers the interest shared by William Hogarth and Charles Dickens on the idea of instrumentality in the art of realism. Taking his cue from eighteenth-century epistemological philosophy, Hogarth developed an idea of beauty and realism as insisting upon the need for human subjectivity or perspective. Naïve realism was a style that troubled both Hogarth and Dickens and both men developed forms in which caricature, melodrama and exaggeration is crucial to the development of verisimilitude. Considering the progress pieces and the writings of Hogarth as a preface to the style of Dickens, I argue that Nicholas Nickleby developed an extraordinary self-reflexivity. Both Nicholas and his uncle Ralph form part of a narrative study of the implications of filtering perception through the distorting lens of the individual.
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