From the magazine

Studying Dickens at university was once considered demeaning. Now it’s too demanding

Accessible, ‘relevant’ short stories are increasingly replacing the classics, as the monuments of Victorian literature defeat today’s undergraduates

Philip Hensher
Charles Dickens in his study at Gad’s Hill, near Rochester, Kent.  Getty Images
EXPLORE THE ISSUE 10 May 2025
issue 10 May 2025

Any consideration of Stefan Collini’s subject has surely to address a major recent issue. The academic study of English, both at school and university, has fallen away significantly, with the numbers opting for it greatly diminishing. Anecdotal evidence from even the most serious institutions suggests that many students are now finding previously accessible texts impossible to read or understand – because of their length (Charles Dickens), their complexity of meaning (Alexander Pope) or remote sensibility or politics (Joseph Conrad).

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