Sunday, August 18, 2019
North and South and Hard Times Essay -- Dickens Hard Times Essays
North and South and Hard Times à à Inà "Industrial" H Sussman states that "one of the most significant shifts createdà by industrialism" was that of the "separation of the workplace from the home".à This "shift" created "new gender roles" with the "husband as breadwinner [andà the] wife as childcare giver" and led ultimately to the "19th centuryà ideology of the two separate spheres -à the masculine public sphere of work [and]à the private female sphere of domesticity". Is, however, this "shift" one whichà Elizabeth Gaskell in North and South and Charles Dickens in Hard Times not only reflect but one which they endorse? à If the publicà sphere is masculine then the opening chapters of HardTimes immediately confronts us with this masculinity in the form of Gradgrind. Theà opening line of the novel, "Now what I want is facts", is assertive andà authorative, the masculine manifestation of public speech. The demand for factsà can be articulated by Gradgrind and responded to in the appropriate termsà by Bitzer, who too, is part of this masculine world, and who can thereforeà clinically define a horse. Sissy Jupe however, in the face of such assertivenessà is unable to react in any terms other than being inarticulate and "alarmed".à Dickens however does not share Gradgrind's demands for the masculine "fact".à In writing Hard Times Dickens drew heavily from the criticism ofà industrial society in Thomas Carlyle's essay "Signs of the Times". In this essayà Carlyle condemned a society where: "Not only the external and physical alone is... managed by machinery, but the internal and spiritual also". This is the ideaà that the competitive, masculine, business sphere has permeated into the privateà sphere,... ...ard times but reflections of deeplyà divided ones. à BIBLIOGRAPHY: à North andà South, Elizabethà Gaskell, Penguin Classics (1995). à Hardà Times, Charles Dickens,à Oxford World Classics (1998). à "Signs of theà Times", Thomas Carlyle, Thomas Carlyle: Selected Writings , Penguinà Classics (1971) à "Industrial",à H Sussman in A Companion to Victorian Literature and Culture, ed. Herbetà F. Tucker (1999). à "Theà Industrial Novels", Raymond Williams in Culture and Society (1958). à "What mustà not be said: North and South and the problem of women's work", Catherineà Barnes Stevenson. à "The Domesticà Sphere in the Victorian Age", Bonnie G. Smith in Changing Lives. à Charlesà Dickens: The Critical Heritage ed. Phillip Collins. à Elizabethà Gaskell: The Critical Heritage ed. Angus Fasson.
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