Published December 5, 2025 | Version v1
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FICTIONAL INNOCENCE OR SOCIAL REALITY: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF OLIVER TWIST'S 'PERFECT GOODNESS'.

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This article discussed about the moral values as found on the novel of “The Adventures of Oliver Twist”. The English author Charles Dickens' novel, which effectively captures the social climate of the day, the predicament of the impoverished in a capitalist-bourgeois setting, and the suffering of young children, is the focus of this article. This novel is a work of art that has not lost its artistic power and cognitive significance since its appearance. The ugliness and deep contradictions shown in the novel still cause terrible disasters in the lives of many people, and millions of people die of hunger in poverty. In 1839, Charles Dickens published Oliver Twist, a novel that depicts an accurate portrait of London’s criminal underworld throughout his young protagonist, Oliver. Dickens' Oliver Twist is successful because it accurately depicts the deplorable lives of the criminals who lived in nineteenth-century London, both critically and realistically.

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