Dickens vs Tolstoy: Who’s Better?

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2024
  • in this video, I compare Charles Dickens and Leo Tolstoy by looking at their lives, novels, writing styles, themes, characters etc.
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    🕔Time Stamps🕔
    00:00 Background
    04:09 Life
    09:48 Novels
    15:16 Writing Style
    22:12 Characters
    28:40 Themes
    33:15 Stats
    35:29 Writing purpose
    38:33 Today
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    #dickens
    #tolstoy
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Komentáře • 59

  • @Fiction_Beast
    @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety +6

    Support the channel
    ► Monthly donation with perks on Patreon: www.patreon.com/fictionbeast
    ► One-time donation on Ko-Fi: ko-fi.com/fictionbeast
    My Summar & Analysis of Tolstoy's War and Peace: czcams.com/video/lDPSSYUSRb0/video.html
    My Summar & Analysis of Tolstoy's Anna Karenina: czcams.com/video/RKDK5-KYDvw/video.html
    Life Lessons from Tolstoy: czcams.com/video/j8GbYUxoyKo/video.html
    Tolstoy vs Dostoevsky: czcams.com/video/NRjI8OPs2Xg/video.html

  • @sarahtalone6251
    @sarahtalone6251 Před 2 lety +19

    Man, your content is amazingly absurd. The quality exceeds itself everytime! Thank you for this, and for every other video on these insane writers as well. Greetings from Brazil. We really need deeper dives on what real literature and art feels like.

  • @nigelbryant7980
    @nigelbryant7980 Před 2 lety +15

    Very well done. I’ve always thought Dickens’ writing felt like one’s closest friend talking to you.

  • @BrightGarlick
    @BrightGarlick Před 2 lety +11

    Brilliant analysis of 2 very different human worlds who tell stories from very different perspectives and scales! And to think both admired Hugo! Great stuff! Please throw Sam Clemens in the mix, especially against these two titans! Thanks for making learning so deeply enjoyable!

    • @lnt8907
      @lnt8907 Před 2 lety

      Tolstoy did not admire Hugo until the end of his life. M. Gorky recalled Tolstoy's words: "Hugo is different. I don't like him - a screamer" Gorky also recalled Tolstoy's top three French writers: "The French have three writers: Stendhal, Balzac and Flaubert, well, Maupassant, but Chekhov is better than him"

    • @BrightGarlick
      @BrightGarlick Před 2 lety

      @@lnt8907 that's certainly a shame and Tolstoy's loss!

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety

      Thank you very much!

  • @wiseone1013
    @wiseone1013 Před 2 lety +4

    Excellent work, learning lots, many thanks 👍

  • @Saber23
    @Saber23 Před 2 lety +4

    Matt you’ve got me excited now ❤️🙏

  • @merlisist
    @merlisist Před rokem

    Many thanks for your wonderful posts!!!! P.x

  • @Beesmakelifegoo
    @Beesmakelifegoo Před rokem +2

    Thank you.
    What you are doing is appreciated.
    It makes life enjoyable.
    It’s so interesting to learn about the human conditions through different eyes.
    It’s definitely need.

  • @manojnayakdotcom
    @manojnayakdotcom Před 2 lety +3

    You are so brilliant. Thoroughly enjoying these literature videos 😀

  • @outofbox000
    @outofbox000 Před 2 lety +1

    Keep them coming man...

  • @sachus1257
    @sachus1257 Před 2 lety +1

    Enjoyed a lot ❤️

  • @alkaloitongbam6684
    @alkaloitongbam6684 Před 2 lety +1

    Well research and beautifully presented ♥️

  • @UK-jt3mw
    @UK-jt3mw Před rokem

    Probably your best work. Well done.

  • @nathanmchiyengi7883
    @nathanmchiyengi7883 Před 2 lety +2

    Really enjoying this

  • @hansarnulfbusch3508
    @hansarnulfbusch3508 Před rokem

    Very interesting lecture, inspiration for me to read more on Dickens. Do you have lectures on Norwegian writers as Knut Hamsun?

  • @NS-ls2yc
    @NS-ls2yc Před rokem

    Well done!

  • @jospram6116
    @jospram6116 Před 2 lety +2

    Hi! Can you make a video about Akutagawa, please? After read Hell's Screen and Rashomon, I felt in love with his style, but I can't found a video on YT that talk about him and his crafts.

  • @Saketmishra02
    @Saketmishra02 Před 2 lety +3

    33:49 Yes India reads Dickens .. Christmas Carol and David Copperfield are prescribed in school syllabus . Tagore's English translations are read more widely in India than in his first language of creation i.e Bengali .

  • @harisubramanian4165
    @harisubramanian4165 Před rokem +1

    Brilliant 🔥

  • @mary-ls9ce
    @mary-ls9ce Před rokem

    This is great. Thanks.

  • @ericmyers3561
    @ericmyers3561 Před rokem +3

    You can’t simplify Dickens books by calling them fairytales. While his storytelling had a fantasy element, he was using the fantasy to make a larger point. Dickens was writing about the British class system and the social conditions of the poor in the mid to late 19th century. He was a ‘trailblazer’ during his time. Prior to him there weren’t English social protest novels.

  • @lnt8907
    @lnt8907 Před 2 lety +4

    8:48
    Tolstoy, after his spiritual upheaval, ceased to lean from the nihilism of Schopenhauer to his own religion. We see this in his work of confession in chapter 8.

    • @lnt8907
      @lnt8907 Před 2 lety

      in fact, the question of a Tolstoy nihilist is very complicated, because Alexei Maksimovich Peshkov writes in his work “Tolstoy, Chekhov, Lenin”: “I am deeply convinced that, in addition to everything he says, he still says a lot to himself, as well two notebook diaries, which he gave me and L. A. Sulerzhitsky for reading; it seemed to me the negation of all beliefs - the deepest and worst nihilism, which grew out of the soil of endless despair and loneliness.in fact, this may not be true.

  • @sharontheodore8216
    @sharontheodore8216 Před 2 lety +2

    I find Dickinson characters do evolve in general as evidenced by the changes that Mr Scrooge, Pip, Stella, Oliver Twist and many others underwent. There was misery but also hope that the industrial revolution brought. Really enjoyed, thanks.

    • @prasoonjha1816
      @prasoonjha1816 Před 2 lety

      *Dickens'

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety

      Great point. I made too many general points but yes, but both are great novelists.

  • @TheMrTJWhite
    @TheMrTJWhite Před 2 lety +1

    Great video as always. In regards to reading Dickens, should one start from Pickwick Papers and go through chronologically, or select his classics freely?

  • @hayatkaidi7889
    @hayatkaidi7889 Před 2 lety +2

    Who else falls asleep in the middle of the video and has, always, to watch the live again 😂.
    LAZY STUDENT 😅.

  • @batman5224
    @batman5224 Před 2 lety +12

    This is definitely documentary level quality. In terms of writing style, I prefer Dickens, but when it comes to morals and themes, Tolstoy is the master.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před 2 lety

      Appreciate it.

    • @fhilbo1701
      @fhilbo1701 Před rokem

      Writing style? So you read Tolstoy in the original Russian then?

    • @batman5224
      @batman5224 Před rokem

      @@fhilbo1701 One can get a sense of an author’s style in a good translation, even if it is watered down.

  • @dylanclark9903
    @dylanclark9903 Před rokem

    Please do Hemingway!
    If you liked Fitzgeralds work, I know you’ll eat up Hemingway.
    In my opinion, For Whom the Bell Tolls and the Sun Also Rises are his best works. Although Sun doesn’t hit you until the last pages.

  • @jorgeespinosa3179
    @jorgeespinosa3179 Před rokem

    Oh wow. Both answers are correct.

  • @Holmnielsen-
    @Holmnielsen- Před 2 lety +4

    Personally, I don’t think you can get better than Dickens. The animated characters, the uplifting themes, and the aspirational outlook on life. Tolstoy is a bored rich kid and Dickens the poor boy with a pep to his walk. Dickens hands down.

    • @lnt8907
      @lnt8907 Před 2 lety +8

      >Tolstoy is a bored rich kid)))))
      Lmao.

    • @prasoonjha1816
      @prasoonjha1816 Před 2 lety +2

      I have read only "Great Expectations" from Dickens and I still feel he is the greatest!

    • @Holmnielsen-
      @Holmnielsen- Před 2 lety

      @@prasoonjha1816 it was good! A bit long imo

  • @ericmyers3561
    @ericmyers3561 Před rokem +1

    But who has time to read Tolstoy? Books were written for the unemployed or maybe wealthy aristocrats. People with the time to read 1200 pages.
    Way too long.
    Dickens is the one.

    • @vanishing_girl
      @vanishing_girl Před rokem +1

      Tolstoy only has one book over 1000 pages (W&P) one book about 900 pages (Anna Karenina). Resurrection is about 600 pages long. His nine other novels are all less than 200 pages. Dickens has 8 books over 800 pages, 10 over 600 pages, with Bleak House and Little Dorit both being over 1000 pages. Dickens has 20 novel/novellas and Tolstoy only has 12 novels/novellas. It takes way more time to read through Dickens than Tolstoy.

  • @dannywhite9975
    @dannywhite9975 Před 8 měsíci

    Clash of titans.

  • @gerryhouska2859
    @gerryhouska2859 Před 11 měsíci

    Neither. Purveyors of sentimental melodramas.

  • @rightcheer5096
    @rightcheer5096 Před 9 měsíci

    Dicstoy is infinitely superior to Tolkens.

  • @cannad6367
    @cannad6367 Před 2 měsíci

    Read Dickens ' books at Young age, read Tolstoy 's books at middle age, will have better understanding of all these books.
    After all, at old age, you will realize that your life stories are more realistic and dramatic than all these books.