Skip to main content

Dickens Day 2017: Dickens and Fantasy

When:
Venue: Senate House

No booking required

Dickens Day 2017 will be considering Dickens and Fantasy. Fantasy pervades Dickens's writing, from the goblins who stole a sexton in his first novel, Pickwick Papers, to the use of fairy tales in Edwin Drood, his last. His deeply held commitment to 'fancy', a word from the same root as 'fantasy', and the influence of the One Thousand and One Nights on his work is well known. Dickens also loved theatrical fantasies, such as pantomime with its 'gaslight fairies' as he called them in Household Words. Dickens often linked scientific and technological developments to fancy and fantasy and delighted in juxtaposing the fantastic and the mundane.

Dickens peopled his work with fantasists of all sorts, from Mr Dick, Josiah Bounderby and Harold Skimpole to Pleasant Riderhood's fantasies of sailors and breadfruit and Louisa Gradgrind's visions in the fire. Oliver Twist's hallucinatory dream, Fagin in the condemned cell and Dickens's well-known influence on Sigmund Freud confirm the fertility of Dickens's work for conceptions of the unconscious and associated mental states. G. H. Lewes claimed that Dickens hallucinated his characters and Robert Buss's painting Dickens' Dream implies he dreamt them. How does Dickens's creative process relate to fantasy in both the imaginative and psychological sense?

In what way do Dickens's 'Christmas' books fit within the fantasy tradition and what is their relationship to his other works? What was Dickens's influence on contemporary and subsequent fantasy authors? How does Dickens use fantasy motifs? How does fantasy use Dickensian motifs? These are just some of the questions we hope to consider on the day.

Jointly run by Birkbeck, Cardiff University, the Dickens Fellowship and the Institute of English Studies, this one-day conference will explore all aspects of Dickens and fantasy.

See the full programme and reserve your place on the Institute of English Studies page here.