Linguae &: Rivista di Lingue e Culture Moderne (Jul 2020)

Roaring Trains and Ringing Bells: A Stylistic Analysis of Soundscape in Charles Dickens’s Dombey and Son

  • Federica Zullo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7358/ling-2020-001-zull
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 77 – 90

Abstract

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In my essay I investigate Charles Dickens’s innovative use of language combined with a specific reference to the acoustic environment, which characterizes most of his works and defines his pervasive style. Rhythms, alliterations, the use of anaphora and onomatopoeia, and the variations of register in Dombey and Son constitute the most visible and ‘audible’ examples of the relationship between language and soundscape, as I explain in the first part of my work. Later, I explore how, in Dombey and Son, Dickens surprises and displaces the reader by using internal deviation and omitting the normally expected clues of context and coherence. I analyse these linguistic and stylistic aspects in the chapters that refer to the railway boom and the sounds of trains and ringing bells that accompany the troubled misadventures of one of the novel’s main characters.

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