Throughout the pages of DAVID COPPERFIELD, there are three major villains: Mr. Murdstone (David's megalomaniacal stepfather); Uriah Heep (a simpering hypocrite); and, MAYBE, James Steerforth (David's longtime friend and idol).
We first encounter Steerforth at Salem House, where David first attends school. He is a self-possessed, willful boy several years older than David. However, he is fascinated with Steerforth's strong character and soon befriends him. Even though we sense Steerforth's utter disregard and callousness for and toward other people and even observe overt and covert examples of it (for instance, Mr. Mell the schoolmaster and later Rosa, Steerforth's frustrated lover), he still captivates David (as he indeed captivates everyone else, with a few exceptions, around him). Similar to how Mephistopheles' corrupt charm worked on a deluded Faust, Steerforth leads all that were deceived by him to eventual despair or even death.
What is the attraction that Steerforth holds for most of the characters in DAVID COPPERFIELD...including most of the novel's readers? Unlike Mr. Murdstone and Uriah Heep, who are indeed the Devil's Own, there is little that is blatantly evil or cruel about Steerforth. Whereas a Mr. Murdstone physically and mentally torments and enslaves a mother and her child, and a Uriah Heep maliciously and underhandedly attempts to drive his good-natured employer to ruin, Steerforth does none of these things...he's quite direct in all that he does and "cool" in all that he intends. However, we know that he might be capable of similar (if not worse) atrocities if he chose to perpetrate them.
>I'd like to discuss this topic with other members of this forum. Please offer your opinions/ analysis of Steerforth's character and, in turn, I'll offer my own. In short, what do you think?: How does Dickens present evil and corruption via James Steerforth?<![]()
Thanks for your feedback, GFM



Thanks for your feedback, GFM

Reply With Quote
