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crossref-it.info - AS/A2 English Literature Study Guides - texts in context.

 

Impact of industrialisation

Two phases

The First Industrial Revolution, beginning at the end of the eighteenth century, started with the mechanisation of the textile industry. The development of steam power meant:

The second phase of the Industrial Revolution, often termed the Second Industrial Revolution, ran from the mid to the late nineteenth century. This saw:

Textile Manufacture

The development of steam power enabled the use of power looms and spinning frames in cotton mills. These increased production and Britain became the chief supplier of cotton goods to the rest of the world.

Since owners ran their mills for profit and there were very few laws protecting workers from exploitation, many men, women, and children suffered death and ill health from working long hours in terrible conditions.

In her 1855 novel, North and South, realist writer Elizabeth Gaskell set out to highlight the atrocities that were taking place as a result of careless management of both industrial and rural labourers. Having encountered the misery of a farm hand, her heroine Margaret Hale moves to the industrial town of Milton where she befriends a teenage girl named Bessy Higgins. Bessy tells Margaret,

‘I think I was well when mother died, but I have never been rightly strong sin’ somewhere about that time. I began to work in a carding-room soon after, and fluff got into my lungs and poisoned me.’
‘Fluff?’ said Margaret inquiringly.
‘Fluff,’ repeated Bessy. ‘Little bits, as fly off fro’ the cotton, when they’re carding it, and fill the air till it looks all fine white dust. They say it winds round the lungs, and tightens them up. Anyhow, there’s many a one works in a carding-room, that falls into a waste, coughing and spitting blood, because they’re just poisoned by the fluff.’ (Chapter 13)

Once the plight of workers such as Bessy Higgins was brought to the attention of the general public, parliament did eventually pass several regulation acts and labour laws to prevent such exploitation.

The railway

The 1830s saw the rapid spread of the railway. The construction of railway lines:

The fact that the government demanded rail companies provide low fares meant greater travel for the general public. This in turn led to:

In 1851, millions of people were able to take advantage of the railway and travel to the Great Exhibition in London.

More on the Great Exhibition: Queen Victoria opened the Great Exhibition on May 1st 1851. Located in the magnificently built Crystal Palace, in Hyde Park, London, it showcased new inventions and innovations in science and technology from all over the world.

For the impact of the railway on literature, see The world of Victorian writers 1837-1901 / Transport, communication and travel.

Printing and publishing

In the early to mid nineteenth century, the advancements made in the technology of printing, along with the mass production of paper and the speed of travel, gave rise to a new reading public.

Resistance

The Luddites

In Nottinghamshire in 1811, a series of machine breaking riots took place. These riots marked the beginning of Luddism. The Luddites were angry at the increasing use of mechanisation in factories and highlighted the urgent need for better working conditions. They took their name from ‘Ned Ludd’, who, according to legend, lived in Sherwood Forest and advocated anti-industrialization.

In 1849, Charlotte Brontë’s novel Shirley portrayed the Luddite uprisings in the Yorkshire textile industry. Here, mill operater Robert Moore finds that the shipment of machinery he had been awaiting arrives smashed to pieces by angry workers protesting the loss of their jobs.

Trade unions

The mid nineteenth century saw the birth of the trade union and the strike. Unhappy with their lack of rights, many workers protested by organising strikes. However, with no organised strike pay, many found it hard to sustain such protests and employers often refused to hire known strikers.

Highlighting the living and working conditions in the industrial cities, Elizabeth Gaskell’s 1848 novel Mary Barton discusses the terrible repercussions of a worker’s strike.

Literary protest

Following on from William Blake’s mention of ‘chartered streets’ in the poem London, and ‘dark, satanic mills’ in Jerusalem, protest poems such as Caroline Norton’s A Voice from the Factories (1836) and Thomas Hood’s Song of the Shirt (1843) were written to highlight the sufferings of the oppressed working classes in industrial cities. Alongside these, Elizabeth Barrett Browning composed The Cry of the Children to express her anger at the reports of the Children’s Employment Commission of 1842, whilst Charles Kingsley's Alton Locke addressed the wrongs of industrialisation and the rise of the Chartist movement.

A large piece of paper, originally printed on one side with popular ballads or political satire. Its modern association is with ‘intellectual’ newspaper publication.
A method of publishing stories via the popular press in weekly or monthly sections.
Inexpensive entertaining fiction, characterised by yellow binding, which was popular in the Victorian era, particularly as rail travel expanded.
Collection of books and, by association, the building in which it is housed
Angry at the increasing use of mechanisation (rendering many unemployed) and poor working conditions in factories, the Luddites took their name from the mythical ‘Ned Ludd’, who advocated anti-industrialisation.
An association of workers within a shared trade, or group of trades, who work collectively to protect the rights and interests of the group / individuals within it, often over matters such as pay and working conditions.
Employees collectively withholding their labour, in order to gain concessions such as better pay or improved working conditions.
A poem that is written to make a stand against injustices that are occurring at the time. It may directly or indirectly criticise the government over a variety issues such as women’s rights or poor working conditions.