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The christmas carol dickens
The christmas carol dickens












the christmas carol dickens

MICHAEL SLATER: Well, that's a reference to the Reverend Malthus. ROMER: Dickens biographer Michael Slater says that last phrase, surplus population - that is the key to understanding the fight Dickens is picking with economics. HANNAH BLOOMQUIST: (As character) And they'd rather die first.ĪDAM: (As Ebenezer Scrooge) If they would rather die, then they'd better do so at once and decrease the surplus population.

the christmas carol dickens

Those that are badly off must go there.ĪLEXIS BROWN: (As character) But so many cannot go there. ROMER: I recently visited Branford High School in Branford, Conn., to watch its staged adaptation of "A Christmas Carol." It turns out, even if your Ebenezer Scrooge is a teenager, asking for donations to Christmas charities still a bit of a nonstarter.ĪDAM JACKSON: (As Ebenezer Scrooge) My taxes go to support the prisons and the workhouses. The story is deeply preoccupied with questions of wealth and poverty and with a then-brand-new social science that purported to be able to answer those questions - political economy, economics. KEITH ROMER, BYLINE: "A Christmas Carol" takes place during the Industrial Revolution. Keith Romer, with our Planet Money podcast, says this holiday classic is a pointed critique of what was then a pretty new social science called economics. But Dickens also had another lesson in mind when the story was published in 1843. It's a heartwarming reminder of the importance of generosity. Of course, it tells a story of three Christmas spirits who teach the miser Ebenezer Scrooge the true meaning of the holiday.

the christmas carol dickens

"A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens is a redemption story.














The christmas carol dickens