Sunday, October 13, 2019
An Analysis of Moll Flanders Essay -- Moll Flanders Essays
      An Analysis of Moll Flanders     Ã       The novel is about the realistic experiences of a woman in the underworld of  18th century London. She is anonymous, Moll Flanders being a pseudonym which she  adopts when she needs an alternative identity for her criminal life.     Ã       She has no family, having been abandoned by her own mother - a transported  felon, and her upbringing, education, social position and material well - being  are all constantly precarious.     Ã       She lives in a hostile, urban world, which allows for no weakness. Social  position and wealth are the dominant factors for survival. She has neither and  her life is a struggle to achieve both.     She is clever and persevering, always alert to opportunity and she survives  and becomes rich, although after a life fraught with difficulty, much of it of  her own making.     Ã       Defoe's novel gives us a clear sense of daily life and the anxieties  attendant on economic and social uncertainty and he displays a clear  understanding of female specifics, in a criminal world.     Defoe himself was an 'outsider'. A Londoner who often had to live by his  wits, pursued by creditors and spending time in Newgate prison for debt. His own  honesty was at times rather dubious.     Ã       He writes accurate social history in a fictional form. The social details in  'Moll Flanders' are very accurate, even those set in Virginia and the novel is  also politically and economically structured.     Ã       The themes of the novel, in part, are transgression, repentance and  redemption, which are to be expected, given Defoe's Dissenting background.  Moll's fortunes do not prosper in the 'Babylon' of London, but in Virginia, in  the 'New' world. Perhaps Defoe was suggesting, like hi...              ...ly innocent, despite her adventures and her chosen  lifestyle as a master criminal. Defoe shows us the two sides of her character in  constant opposition. On the one hand, she can be thrifty, cold and efficient and  on the other, reckless, excited and bold. She is never dull. Again, Defoe makes  no moral judgement, but leaves the reader to make his own.     Ã       The novel is structured so that we see a series of parodies of tragic  situations, which often become almost bizarre in their comic absurdity. Moll  sometimes behaves insensitively, or even in a completely callous way, but  Defoe's heroine is never contemptible, eagerly thrusting from one experience to  the next. The novel has a deep intensity of experience. Moll's emotions, too are  mixed and unstable, but she always recognises and articulates them, even if she  does not show complete understanding of them.                      
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