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Reminder to enter: Journalists’ Charity Dickens-inspired competition

Posted on: May 26, 2020 by admin

A reminder that the Journalists’ Charity Dickens competition is accepting entries until June 9; the 150th anniversary of the death of the author.

In just 300 words, with Dickens’s descriptive flamboyance, the charity is asking entrants to pen a portrait of a 21st century character you think would have deserved his attention. 

Funds raised will assist journalists who are facing hardship due to the serious effect the Covid-19 crisis has had on livelihoods.


The Journalists’ Charity has launched a competition inspired by its founder Charles Dickens to help it further assist those in need amid the coronavirus outbreak.

The charity, which the great Charles Dickens helped found, is asking readers to consider the kind of people living today who might have captured the writer’s imagination and who could be his great inspirational characters of the 21st Century.

In just 300 words – with Dickens’s descriptive flamboyance – the charity is asking readers to pen a portrait of the 21st century character you think would have deserved his attention?

With the support of the Dickens Fellowship, the Charity has said that funds raised will help it assist those journalists who are now facing hardship because the coronavirus pandemic has had a serious effect on their livelihoods.

The competition is open to everyone and although free to enter, the Charity is encouraging participants and non-participants alike to make a donation. Full details and rules can be found at www.journalistscharity.org.uk/dickens.     

Judges for the competition will include Dickens’s great, great, grandson and the Dickens Fellowship. Board members from The Journalists’ Charity will be among the judging panel and  Mr Ian Dickens, will be joined by Professor Malcolm Andrews, Editor of The Dickensian  and Professor Jenny Hartley, Editor of The Selected Letters of Charles Dickens.

The winning character will be brought to life in a unique illustration by one of Britain’s greatest cartoonists.

Dickens began his glittering career as a freelance Parliamentary reporter and helped set up the Journalists’ Charity which, since 1864, has supported journalists and their families In the UK and Ireland who may have fallen on hard times.

Mr Ian Dickens, President of the Dickens Fellowship, said: “This is such a wonderful competition, full of rich potential and modern-day relevance. The joy of Dickens is the range of characters that inhabit every page. Drawn from acute observation of those he knew and those he chanced upon, they connect with the reader because we all recognise elements within them. And such rich pickings continue to place themselves firmly in front of us every day, if we bother to stop, listen and imagine. I can’t wait to meet them. “  

Mr Ramsay Smith, Chairman of the Journalists’ Charity, said: “Our charity is delighted to launch this competition with the support of the Dickens Fellowship. As a pioneer of the charity, Charles Dickens embodied a remarkable charitable spirit that has remained at our core for more than 150 years.

“Journalists the world over are doing a brilliant job reporting the Coronavirus pandemic but the reality is that many, particularly freelance journalists, are facing an extremely challenging time.

“This competition provides a great opportunity for people – journalists and non-journalists alike – to put their creative skills to work in these strange times. We hope everyone who holds the works of Dickens dear will take part.”

Entries must be received by the charity by 5pm on June 9th 2020 the 150th anniversary of the death of Charles Dickens. Entries online can be sent before the same deadline to Dickens@journalistscharity.org.uk  or by mail to Dickens House, 35 Wathen Road, Dorking, Surrey, RH4 1JY.

The winner will receive a certificate and the original drawing of their character by veteran Fleet Street cartoonist, Stanley McMurtry, MBE  – better known as MAC.