William Godwin Essays
Injustice and Bad Sympathy in the Novel of Feeling College
Caleb Williams
The eponymous characters of William Godwin’s Things as They Are; or, The Adventures of Caleb Williams and Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly; or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker serve as protagonists that do not always seem to be at the center of...
History Repeats Itself: The Cyclical Nature of Caleb Williams College
Caleb Williams
They say that those who don’t learn from history are condemned to repeat it; such is the curse of the characters in Caleb Williams, or Things As They Are, by William Godwin. Throughout the narrative, the characters are plagued by a repetition of...
The Effects of the Social Hierarchy in Caleb Williams and Pamela or Virtue Rewarded College
Caleb Williams
Samuel Richardson’s Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded and William Godwin’s Caleb Williams are both novels that deal with the influence of social hierarchy on the characters’ psychologies. In Caleb Williams, the protagonist is a young man who learns the...
Inescapable Hauntings in Caleb Williams and Beloved College
Caleb Williams
Written almost two hundred years apart, William Godwin’s Caleb Williams and Toni Morrison’s Beloved convey stories in which the characters attempt to find freedom by fleeing from unfair oppression and the haunting remnants of oppression. Caleb...
Caleb Williams: Realism Out of Romance College
Caleb Williams
In William Godwin’s Caleb Williams, the titular protagonist Caleb is purportedly writing to prove his innocence after his former master, Mr. Falkland, destroys his reputation. However, in the postscript, once Falkland has died after being...
Legal Living and Learning: The Corrupt Justice System in 'Caleb Williams' College
Caleb Williams
Throughout the French Revolution, the chaos and insecurity that ensued in France was scrutinized and prompted an English nationwide sigh of relief that chivalry and civility defined English society and legality. These characteristics made...
Fleetwood’s Upbringing and Its Effect on Making Friends College
Fleetwood
In William Godwin’s novel Fleetwood, readers are introduced to a character who is predominantly solitary and is socially inadequate when he is within society. This is due to the fact that he grew up as the only child of a father who was withdrawn...