03434nam 2200577 450 991079719720332120230126212757.01-5040-1077-9(CKB)3710000000378545(EBL)1986607(SSID)ssj0001505844(PQKBManifestationID)11809546(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001505844(PQKBWorkID)11490228(PQKB)11775867(MiAaPQ)EBC1986607(Au-PeEL)EBL1986607(CaONFJC)MIL750273(OCoLC)904790033(EXLCZ)99371000000037854520181229d2015 uy 1engur|n|---|||||txtccrHard times /by Charles Dickens ; with illustrations by Marcus Stone, Maurice Greiffenhagen, and F. WalkerNew York, New York :Open Road Media,2015.1 online resource (483 p.)Description based upon print version of record.Cover; Title Page; Book the First: Sowing; Chapter I: The One Thing Needful; Chapter II: Murdering the Innocents; Chapter III: A Loophole; Chapter IV: Mr. Bounderby; Chapter V: The Keynote; Chapter VI: Sleary's Horsemanship; Chapter VII: Mrs. Sparsit; Chapter VIII: Never Wonder; Chapter IX: Sissy's Progress; Chapter X: Stephen Blackpool; Chapter XI: No Way Out; Chapter XII: The Old Woman; Chapter XIII: Rachael; Chapter XIV: The Great Manufacturer; Chapter XV: Father and Daughter; Chapter XVI: Husband and Wife; Book the Second: Reaping; Chapter I: Effects In The BankChapter II: Mr. James HarthouseChapter III: The Whelp; Chapter IV: Men and Brothers; Chapter V: Men and Masters; Chapter VI: Fading Away; Chapter VII: Gunpowder; Chapter VIII: Explosion; Chapter IX: Hearing the Last of It; Chapter X: Mrs. Sparsit's Staircase; Chapter XI: Lower and Lower; Chapter XII: Down; Book the Third: Garnering; Chapter I: Another Thing Needful; Chapter II: Very Ridiculous; Chapter III: Very Decided; Chapter IV: Lost; Chapter V: Found; Chapter VI: The Starlight; Chapter VII: Whelp-Hunting; Chapter VIII: Philosophical; Chapter IX: Final; CopyrightCharles Dickens's moral tale of utilitarian values run amok The industrial burg of Coketown is dominated by the philosophy of utilitarianism. The mill is the center of commerce. Students in the school are instructed to recite rote facts and figures while repressing any creative instincts. Thomas Gradgrind, the school superintendent, is a strict devotee of practicality and has raised his children, Tom and Louisa, according to this philosophy. It is only Sissy Jupe, a circus girl taken in by the Gradgrinds, who possesses the vision and wonderment to see past the rigid boundaries of cold, hard faUtilitarianismEnglandFictionSocial problemsEnglandFictionEducationEnglandFictionUtilitarianismSocial problemsEducation823/.8Dickens Charles1812-1870,154882Greiffenhagen Maurice1862-1931,Stone Marcus1840-1921,Walker Frederick1840-1875,MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910797197203321Hard Times22542UNINA