
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Violent Resistance

Stereotypes

Lucie vs. Madame Defarge

Carton vs. Darnay

Collective Guilt

Coincidence
"The difference between fiction and reality? Fiction has to make sense." --Tom Clancy
Over the years critics have debated about Dickens' use of coincidence as a plot device. A Tale of Two Cities contains a number of amazing coincidences and Dickens' never apologized for it, declaring that coincidences happen all the time in real life, so why shouldn't they happen in fiction? Do you agree with Tom Clancy or with Charles Dickens--should fiction always be completely believable? Does Dickens' use of coincidence add to or take away from the book?
Over the years critics have debated about Dickens' use of coincidence as a plot device. A Tale of Two Cities contains a number of amazing coincidences and Dickens' never apologized for it, declaring that coincidences happen all the time in real life, so why shouldn't they happen in fiction? Do you agree with Tom Clancy or with Charles Dickens--should fiction always be completely believable? Does Dickens' use of coincidence add to or take away from the book?
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