Landscape and Labour: Work, Place, and the Working Class in Eliot, Hardy, and Lawrence
Synopsis
In the novels of George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, and D.H. Lawrence a miniature history of the English working class can be found. Through their sympathetic portrayals, these authors transformed working-class culture from a patronizing pastiche into a vital reality. This achievement was crucial to the rise of the English working-class as the key agency of democratic reform from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. In our own times, by contrast, depictions of working-class culture are patronizing at best, if not openly denigrating. This crisis of representation has born recent fruit in the phenomenon of populism, a long-term consequence of the undermining of genuinely popular rule under neoliberal capitalism. Returning to the works of Eliot, Hardy, and Lawrence allows us to regain a sense of direction for contemporary politics, by rediscovering the vital force of working-class culture.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
- ISBN: 9781538158562
- Number of pages: 168
- Dimensions: 227 x 151 x 14 mm
- Weight: 266g
- Languages: English
