A few days ago
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Great Expectations?

Ok, in the book Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, who does Pip learn his great expectations from? I’m really confused on this one (yes I finally read the book), and I need some help. I have four choices, and I’d have a reason for choosing all of them. So any help would be great and extremely appreciated. I think it would be Miss Hacisham because he had “great expectations” from her when it ended up being Magwich that was his benefactor. So again, if you could help and have an explination for your answer, I’ll give ya ten points and return help if you need it.

Q: Pip learns his great expectations from…

A. Miss Havisham

B. Estella

C. Joe

D. Mr. Jaggers

Top 5 Answers
A few days ago
quatt47

Favorite Answer

As you will see from the explanation below Pip did not get his ‘expectations’ from anyone. Chales Dickens had the story serialised ina magazine over many months and was based on Pip’s life from 1912 to 1840. However as Jaggers is the first to advise Pip of his ‘great expectations’ I suppose the answer would be ‘D’.

The story is divided into three phases of Pip’s life expectations. The first “expectation” is allotted 19 chapters, and the other two 20 chapters each in the 59-chapter work. In some editions, the chapter numbering reverts to Chapter One in each expectation, but the original publication and most modern editions number the chapters consecutively from one to 59. At the end of chapters 19 and 39, readers are formally notified that they have reached the conclusion of a phase of Pip’s expectations.

In the first expectation, Pip lives a humble existence with his ill-tempered older sister and her strong, but gentle husband, Joe Gargery. Pip is satisfied with this life and his warm friends until he is hired by an embittered wealthy woman, Miss Havisham, as an occasional companion to her and her beautiful but haughty adopted daughter, Estella. From that time on, Pip aspires to leave behind his simple life and be a gentleman. After years as companion to Miss Havisham and Estella, he spends more years as an apprentice to Joe, so that he may grow up to have a livelihood working as a blacksmith. This life is suddenly turned upside down when he is visited by a London attorney, Mr. Jaggers, who informs Pip that he is to come into the “great expectations” of handsome property and be trained to be a gentleman at the behalf of an anonymous benefactor.

The second stage of Pip’s expectations has Pip in London, learning the details of being a gentleman, having tutors, fine clothing, and joining cultured society. Whereas he always engaged in honest labour when he was younger, he now is supported by a generous allowance, which he frequently lives beyond. He learns to fit in this new milieu, and experiences not only friendship but rivalry as he finds himself in the same circles as Estella, who is also pursued by many other men, especially Bentley Drummle, whom she favours. As he adopts the physical and cultural norms of his new status, he also adopts the class attitudes that go with it, and when Joe comes to visit Pip and his friend and roommate Herbert to deliver an important message, Pip is embarrassed to the point of hostility by Joe’s unlearned ways, despite his protestations of love and friendship for Joe. At the end of this stage, Pip is introduced to his benefactor, again changing his world.

The third and last stage of Pip’s expectations alters Pip’s life from the artificially supported world of his upper class strivings and introduces him to realities that he realizes he must deal with, facing moral, physical and financial challenges. He learns startling truths that cast into doubt the values that he once embraced so eagerly, and finds that he cannot regain many of the important things that he had cast aside so carelessly. The current ending of the story is different from Dickens’s original intent, in which the ending matched the gloomy reverses to Pip’s fortunes that typify the last expectation. Dickens was prevailed upon to change the ending to one more acceptable to his readers’ tastes in that era, and this “new” ending was the published one and currently accepted as definitive.

Dickens has Pip as the writer and first person narrator of this account of his life’s experiences, and the entire story is understood to have been written as a retrospective, rather than as a present tense narrative or a diary or journal. Still, though Pip “knows” how all the events in the story will turn out, he uses only very subtle foreshadowing so that we learn of events only when the Pip in the story does. Pip does, however, use the perspective of the bitter lessons he’s learned to comment acidly on various actions and attitudes in his earlier life.

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A few days ago
Anonymous
I checked with my hubby who loves this book and he would argue that any of these could be correct for various reasons. Partly, it has to do with how you describe what the author meant by great expectations. Why not pick the one you think is best and then support it with your reasons, just like you already have.

(side note — This is a very odd question — where do teachers learn to put together crap questions like this???)

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4 years ago
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In old Victorian way of existence a guy ought to get wealth, yet no longer be a gentleman! That became right into a classification factor, a number of it incredibly is Dickens railing against the social injustice of his day! Which maximum of his books are, i think of brialliant!
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A few days ago
NMprof
This is why multiple choice questions are complete and utter crap.
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A few days ago
Anonymous
dang i barely remember this

book but i would say

a.

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