Social Class In Gulliver's Travels And Great Expectations

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Over the past several centuries, the human race developed a sense of power and many wanted to obtain this power to become more superior over others. A demand of power relied heavily upon the creation of social classes that divides any type of society or civilization. However, as some ascend to higher social classes, more responsibilities and power one obtains while other descend to feel the unworthiness and dissatisfaction of low wealth. Thus engulfs a major theme of two novels written in the nineteenth century, Gulliver 's Travels and Great Expectations. The main character in both novels embarks on a journey or multiple journeys to challenge their social classes by ascending towards higher social classes in their societies through a mere desire or ideal, finding ironic situations dealing with their current social class and aswell, and sensing a distasteful regards of their formal social classes. Thereby, a change within in a social class starts with a mere desire for a change.
As lower class people at some point envies their higher counterparts, they however, grow a miniscule ideal of one day rising to top of class. Pip, the moral driven orphan and main protagonist in Great Expectations, begins to appraise a desire after meeting the vengeful Miss. Havisham and bitterness Estella, by stating following “The felicitous idea occurred to me a morning or two later when I woke, that the best step I could take towards making myself uncommon was to get out of Biddy

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