Thursday, May 21, 2015

Discussion Make Up

Life like Pip
Make up for discussion
Topic I
by Anna Hoffman
I feel as though I can relate Great Expectations to my life in many ways. I can relate myself to Pip the most. Although I do not believe that I would turn my back on my friends and family any time soon, I feel as though Pip and I both live under great expectations. I have an older brother who is a really great athlete and an amazing student. Being my brother’s younger sister everyone expects me to be amazing at sports also, but I feel just mediocre. Just as when Pip was expected to be a gentleman, I am expected to be a good athlete and good at school. We both had come “into great expectations,” and we both try our hardest to be as good as we can (138).

There are other ways I can compare Great Expectations to my life. My cousin for example is like Pip too. My cousin was a very fun and energetic person, and he always had good grades. But just as Pip’s life underwent a major change, so did my cousin. In his first year of high school, my cousin’s parents got divorced and then his mom remarried right away. He doesn’t like the man she married and he was constantly being driven from one house to another. Ever since the divorce, my cousin has changed into a different person. He is still fun at times, but he makes bad decisions just as Pip had started doing. Just as Pip ignored Joe, my cousin began to ignore his parents. But, I hope that in the end my cousin ends up okay just like Pip, and I believe that it will happen.

Friday, May 15, 2015

Great Expectations

Great Expectations
-Blog Post #5-
Topic J
by Anna Hoffman


In Charles Dickens Great Expectations, the title is rather significant and well suited for the story. Throughout this novel, a young boy named Pip continues on through his life experiencing many the different aspects living. As he continues on his journey he undergoes many obstacles and events that test him as a person, and Pip just being Pip, overlooks or overestimates things. But most importantly Pip must live up to the “expectations” of others in his life. As a young boy Pip lives a modest life, and his only struggle seems to be with Mrs. Joe, his older sister. But when he visits the Satis house his world changes. He tries to be good enough for Estella, but nothing ever seems to impress her. This is an example of how early Pip tried to reach the expectations. After a few years when Pip learns of a generous benefactor supporting him, the expectations are higher because he is expected to be a gentleman. And because Pip, “had come into great expectations from a mysterious patron,” he tries his best to reach them, but never was able to succeed. But nonetheless Pip’s determination shaped him into a good man who does not give up. This title is so significant because, the great expectations hang over his throughout the whole novel, and in the end Pip never is able to reach them, but he still turns out happy. Pip meets with Estella for a long time, and they end up being with each other. Pip did not need to meet these expectations in the end. 

The Good In Miss Havisham

The Good in Miss Havisham
-Blog Post #5-
Topic B
May 12, 2015

Miss Havisham’s character develops significantly in the last chapters of Charles Dicken’s Great Expectations. Before her revelation, Miss Havisham is cold-hearted, vengeful, and downright creepy. She resents all men for what happened to her years ago—being jilted the day of her wedding—by one single man. For years, she does not forgive, and in return, she raises her daughter, Estella, to be a man’s worst nightmare to finally get revenge on all men, not just the man that left her at the altar— Compeyson. While in the process of teaching Estella to be horrible to men, she also takes away Estella’s ability to love her as well as men. Estella reveals this when she tells Miss Havisham in an argument.  
However, after her dress catches on fire and Pip saves her, Miss Havisham realizes that because of the way she raised Estella, Pip was hurt the same way she was by Compeyson. In shock, she screams, “’What have I done,’” referencing how she treated Estella (387). She also admits that she “meant to save [Estella] from misery,” but instead, she did the opposite and made Estella and Pip miserable (387). Miss Havisham immediately begs for forgiveness after her revelation, but Pip never gives her for it. She dies with knowing she will never be forgiven.

Miss Havisham develops from a person who only thinks of herself to a woman who cares about the feelings of others toward the end of her lifetime.

The Crazy and Okonkwo

The Crazy and Okonkwo
~Blog Post 5~
Topic H
May 15, 2015
Debra Dunham

In Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, the character Miss Havisham corresponds with Okonkwo from Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. Both characters experience a significant change in how they are supposed to live.  Okonkwo grows up acting completely opposite to his father (a man who was soft hearted), yet after being banished from his community, he experiences depression and a change of heart. Though little of Miss Havisham’s previous life is given, Herbert says that she raised Estella “to wreak revenge on all the male sex,” (Dickens, 185). Both Okonkwo and Miss Havisham show many others no kindness or love. Moving through both books, the characters find softness in their hearts—after a traumatic experience of course—which in turn changes their perspective on life.


Miss Havisham is nearly killed in a fire in which she nearly dies. Just before that, however, she cries “What have I done!” over and over to Pip expressing that she knows how she lives her life is wrong (423). Okonkwo comes to a similar conclusion as he goes about living in the second tribe and sees how they live their lives. Both characters have a change in heart and how they see the world. Also, both Miss Havisham and Okonkwo die towards the end of the novels they are in. Okonkwo, having hanged himself, brought death upon himself after discovering that there was no hope for him in the new society. Miss Havisham similarly goes so long despising men shut up in her room that there is no hope that she can live a normal life. Miss Havisham and Okonkwo have similar ways of thinking before their conversion and have a major change of heart.

Pip Comes Full Circle


Blog Post #5
Topic J
May 15th, 2015
As we conclude Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, the reader can see the reasoning behind the title. Once the reader gets the full story of Pip’s life, it can be seen that not only does Pip have to live up to the expectations of others, but also the expectations he has for his own life. As a young child, Pip was working with the cards he was dealt, not caring too much about his place in life or social class. Over the course of the novel, the readers see Pip’s expectations for himself change as he gets older and his life progresses. As the money starts to roll in from Pip’s secret benefactor, Pip changes what he wants from his life; he begins to expect much more. Pip begins to have “grand ideas” for his newly obtained wealth and education on being a gentleman (175). This increase of life expectations continues to only cause troubles for Pip. He comes a rude awakening when he sees that money can’t buy happiness and that wealth doesn’t equal happiness. Once, Pip’s life does not live up to his “great expectations” he is forced to come back to reality, which ultimately he becomes content with. In the end, Pip comes full circle and eliminates the “great expectations” he once had. Pip then lives contently, like he had when he was just a little kid. All of the time between the beginning of the novel and the end shape Pip to become a person who no longer expects extremely unrealistic things from his life.

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Changing Expectations

Changing Expectations
~Blog Post #4~
Topic J
By Debra Dunham

In Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, Pip expects and imagines things in a similar way as to how I imagine the near future. For one thing, he believes London to be this magnificent, magical city when in reality, it is dirty. His imagination carries him into a false idea just as I seemingly trick myself into thinking certain things that I know are not real. For instance, I one imagined that I found out that I was the decedent of a lost princess and had the chance to live as one. It was completely imagined and fake, but real in my head. Also, before he meets the convict of his benefactor, he believes it to be Miss Havisham even though it seems entirely improbable, almost impossible.

Estella, the center of Pip's desire to become uncommon, narrows Pip's expectations of himself to being a fine gentleman who can win the heart of the fine lady. He expects to be rich and finds that Joe and Biddy are "quite unfit company" now that he is more well-mannered (250). In a similar way, my expectations of myself are greater than they probably should because my dad had always expected near perfection of me. My mind twisted that into seeing it as 'if I'm not perfect, then I'm not worthy' even though that is not the case. Even now, I strive for perfection, which stresses me out so much that I end up making stupid and thoughtless mistakes. It seems as if Pip's life will take a similar turn, hinted by the way he realizes that he "had deserted Joe," (344). Pip's story will unfold as we come to learn more about his expectations of what life has to offer.

Friday, May 8, 2015

Magwitch and Max

Blog Post #4
Topic H
May 8th, 2015


            In this past section of reading, we learn who has been paying for Pip’s education for the majority of the novel. The mysterious benefactor turns out to be the convict Pip met in the marshes when he was a young boy. The example of an unforeseen character greatly impacting someone’s life in Great Expectation resembles a similar situation in The Book Thief. Both Markus Zusak and Charles Dickens use their unexpected character of Liesel and Magwitch to have a great impact on other characters. In The Book Thief, a little girl, Liesel, takes care of and develops a friendship with Max despite them being people from seemingly two different worlds. Liesel, a young German girl, is one of the most unlikely people to have made a friend with a Jewish man in Nazi Germany, but the two create an unbreakable bond. The relationship shapes both of their lives and contributes greatly to the novel. In connection with Great Expectations, Dickens writes of the convict who is paying for Pip to become a gentleman. Though he didn’t have much when the two first met, he has been helping Pip for years, a curveball that many readers don’t expect. Though at this point, Pip and Magwitch aren’t friends like Max and Liesel, but Magwitch’s contributes have completely altered Pip’s life. In both novels, the characters have significant relationships that affect them thought the rest of the book. In The Book Thief, Liesel and Max have a friendship that lasts a lifetime. Though Pip doesn’t agree, Magwitch sees himself as Pip’s “second father”, as he has greatly contributed and indirectly influenced to who Pip is today (309). The two sets of character relationships have an extremely effects on their lives; keeping Max alive and turning Pip into a gentleman.