Cathy & Graham Novels
ANNOUNCER: Part 3. You will hear two students of English called Cathy and Graham planning a display on 19th-century British life and literature for a university event. You have some time to look at questions 21 to 24. Now listen carefully and answer questions 21 to 24.
CATHY: OK, Graham, let's check we both understand what we’re supposed to be doing.
GRAHAM: OK.
CATHY: For the university’s open day, we need to plan a display about British life and literature in the mid-19th century.
GRAHAM: Yes, that’s right. But we’ll have some people helping us to find materials and set up the display. Right now, we just need to plan it.
CATHY: Do we know who the audience will be? Are they students studying English or students from other departments?
GRAHAM: I’m not sure. It used to be mainly English students, but that didn’t attract many people. This year it’s part of an open day event to promote the university.
GRAHAM: It’ll be advertised around the city, and information about it will also be sent to people thinking of applying to study here.
CATHY: I guess some current students and lecturers might come as well.
GRAHAM: Probably, but we were told to focus mainly on visitors from outside the university.
CATHY: We don’t have to cover all 19th-century literature, do we?
GRAHAM: No, we can choose. I suggest focusing on Charles Dickens.
CATHY: Good idea. Most people know his name and may have read his novels or watched film adaptations.
GRAHAM: Exactly. His novels also show the terrible living conditions people experienced at the time.
CATHY: Did Dickens do any campaigning apart from writing?
GRAHAM: Yes, he supported education and social reforms and gave public lectures. But I think we should focus mainly on his novels.
CATHY: I agree.
ANNOUNCER: Before you hear the rest of the discussion, you have some time to look at questions 25 to 30. Now listen and answer questions 25 to 30.
CATHY: So now let’s think about a topic linked to each novel.
GRAHAM: I printed a list of Dickens’s novels in the order they were published.
CATHY: The first one is The Pickwick Papers, published in 1836.
GRAHAM: Yes, it was extremely popular and quickly adapted for the theatre.
GRAHAM: There’s also a character who falls asleep constantly, and the medical condition was later named Pickwickian syndrome.
CATHY: That could be our topic, along with some quotations from the novel.
GRAHAM: Next is Oliver Twist. It deals with poverty, but perhaps we should choose something more specific.
CATHY: Oliver learns how to steal. That shows how poor children often didn’t go to school and had to learn survival skills instead.
GRAHAM: Good point.
CATHY: What about Nicholas Nickleby? Nicholas works in a cruel school.
GRAHAM: Yes, but he also joins a touring theatre company. We could focus on entertainment and theatre in the 19th century.
CATHY: Good idea. Next is Martin Chuzzlewit. The character travels to the USA.
GRAHAM: Dickens himself had visited America earlier and used that experience in the novel.
CATHY: After that comes Bleak House.
GRAHAM: Yes, it contains a strong criticism of the legal system.
CATHY: But we could focus on the life of Esther, the heroine, and how her life improves.
GRAHAM: That works well.
CATHY: Finally, there’s Little Dorrit, where Mr Dorrit spends years in a debtor’s prison.
GRAHAM: Yes, just like Dickens’s own father once did.
GRAHAM: Maybe we could show the moment when Mr Dorrit suddenly inherits money and pretends he has always been wealthy.
CATHY: That’s a great idea.
ANNOUNCER: That is the end of part 3. You now have 30 seconds to check your answers to part 3.