asked 201k views
1 vote
Why does Dickens often compare joe and pip to one another?

asked
User Chaps
by
8.2k points

2 Answers

7 votes

I'm not completely ure but I think it is to explain why Pip and Joe have a close relationship.

answered
User Daniele Tassone
by
7.8k points
4 votes

Answer:

To compare the social classes and reflect the division.

Step-by-step explanation:

Charles Dickens wrote "Great Expectations" in bildungsroman depicting the personal growth and development of Pip(an orphan). Dickens portrays the relationship between Joe and Pip as quite heart-warming and affectionate at the beginning where Pip calls Joe as his "dear fellow" and "fellow sufferers", but towards the end they are drifted apart from each other. This signifies the two phases of human relationships(reminiscent of Blake's "songs of innocence and Experience"). Dickens compares both of them to display the two different states of human nature where one (Pip) has a sense of longingness to the other and the another(Joe) calls their meeting awkward. He also compares them to depict the division between the classes after Joe moves to London and turns into an educated individual that fills with pride and social differences. He hereby, depicts the effect of social class onto their relationship.

answered
User IQW
by
8.4k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.