A Christmas Carol Key Theme: Death and Loss

Cards (5)

  • Death and loss timeline
    The theme of death and loss in each stave of A Christmas Carol:
  • How are death and loss presented in A Christmas Carol?
    Death and loss are recurring ideas within the novella:
    • Marley’s ghost (Stave 1): The novella begins with establishing Marley’s death through his ghost, bound by the chains, money boxes and padlocks he so coveted in life:
    • This is the first catalyst for Scrooge’s transformation and serves as both a warning to Scrooge and a reminder to Dickens’ readers that our actions in life have consequences beyond the grave
    • The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come (Stave 4): This terrifying ghost personifies death, heightened by Dickens’ descriptions of darkness and use of solemn language:
    • Scrooge’s marked fear of this phantom suggests his potential fate is something to be afraid of
    • Scrooge’s death (Stave 4): The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come shows Scrooge the treatment of an unknown corpse, unloved and uncared for:
    • The characters dealing with the corpse are concerned only by how they might profit from it, mirroring Scrooge’s own attitudes towards money
    • In a moment of dramatic irony, the spirit reveals Scrooge’s own name is on the gravestone; despite his wealth he will die alone, uncared for and this leads ultimately to his repentance 
    • Tiny Tim (Stave 4): In a possible future shown to Scrooge, Tiny Tim’s imagined death is contrasted with Scrooge’s, and the child is mourned while Scrooge is not:
    • Scrooge understands that Tiny Tim’s death was avoidable and accepts his responsibility towards the Cratchit family
    • Through Tiny Tim, Dickens also highlights the poor health, living conditions and malnourishment experienced by many poor children in Victorian Britain
  • Why is death and loss a key theme in A Christmas Carol?
    Dickens uses death and loss to highlight the permanency of death and to indicate that it is never too late to change.
    1.  Personal and social change 
    • Scrooge’s encounters with death serve as a catalyst for his character’s transformation and redemption, emphasising both the value of and ephemerality of life  
    • The presentation of death serves to remind Scrooge — and the reader — that we have a social responsibility to others or we will share fate the fate of Marley and Scrooge (as presented in Stave 4) 
  • 2. A critique of social and class systems
    • Dickens uses A Christmas Carol to criticise the unjust social systems and institutions of Victorian Britain which negatively affected the most vulnerable in society
    • He wanted to highlight the high mortality rate of poorer children and the need for the poor working class to have the means to help themselves