|
LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Rebecca
Harding Davis, Life in the Iron Mills (1861) Reader:
Dendy Farrar Background: Rebecca Harding Davis was born in 1836
in Washington Pennsylvania. Her
family moved to the industrial town of Wheeling West Virginia and that is where
she got a first-hand account of the industrial workers’ harsh conditions. Life in the Iron-Mills was first
published in 1861 in “Atlantic Monthly”.
It is considered a transitional piece in between Romanticism and Realism. Objectives: 1A, 1B, 1C, 2B, 2F Passages: p. 1213 – 1214 describes the town in gothic terms. “A cloudy day … vileness for soul and body.” This offers a catalog of smoke, boats, etc. Davis piles on the words and makes them
heavy in order to mimic the heaviness of the setting p. 1216 the main characters, Deborah and
Hugh are described in gothic terms. “Deborah
groped … almost a hunchback.” This
is a highly grotesque image that includes the interplay of dark and light. p. 1218 the mills are described in
gothic terms. “The road leading
… a street in Hell”. The city
is seen as negative and we see a strong avoidance of the city, “city of
fire”. The prescience of the red
light and the stirring of cauldrons are eerie and gothic. p. 1219 we see the equality/class
struggles, and the gothic. “If
you could go … God has given you.” The
gothic aspect is the mention of the “shadow of death.”
The class issue involves the strong desire for equality, while being
separate from the masses. p. 1220 we see the extent of Hugh’s
separation from the masses. Not
only is he separate from society, but also he is separate from the mill workers
who are part of his class. “When
his learning …” He is alienated
from his own sphere. p. 1222 we see the effects of
industrialism and the inequality between the classes “The rain did not cease
… his face.” p. 1223 this
inequality is described as a “social
riddle” p.
1228 we see the journey toward transcendence and the desire to
self-invent. “Wolfe had not been
vague … as he might become.” p. 1231 we again see Hugh’s personal
journey. “There were times …
mill hands?” We also see the
evident class separation, and Hugh’s strong desire to invent himself. p. 1231 we see an instance of the
sublime, in the pleasure/pain sense “a wonderful pain”. p. 1232 we see the sublime in the
“larger than life” sense. Hugh’s
faith is describe as sublime. “He
was a Christian … furnace tender’s grasp …” 1238 we see the influence of popular
culture. “Do you want to hear the
end of it? “ This is much like
today’s reality, or rubberneck television. 1238 we see the avoidance of the city
and the appreciation of nature. “Thee
sees … bury him tomorrow.” Aspects of Realism 1248 “characters are from … a good deal of bad luck” Darwin’s theory which American businessmen accepted Industrialism – like the law of nature 1249 “Biology … “ 1250-1251 “Outside of literature …
lived.” These aspects of Realism could be
applied to “Life in the Iron-Mills.” So
my question is, “Is this work largely Romantic or Realistic in nature?” Discussion Jennifer – I can’t pick one, the
subject is realistic, but there are gothic elements present. Dr. White – It’s like we are moving
between the two Jennifer – It’s not solely one Kayla – It’s like it is British
literature at the beginning of Romanticism Dr. White – The influences were
British. Page 1211 explains that
Elizabeth Gaskill was a major influence on Davis. Krisann – It reminds me of Gaskill’s
North and South in that it details a class struggle like this story does. Dr. White – Do they compare? Krisann – They are both depressing and
they both have characters with aspirations but they don’t get there, and
instead they die. They are tragic. Jennifer – It reminds me of
Dreiser’s Sister Carrie Lynda – And Hardy’s Tess of the
D’Urbervilles Dendy
– I think that the idea that Hugh is a product of his environment is largely
realistic Dr. White – yes, the fact that he is
limited by environment but born with something greater is romantic, though,
also. We have a
Realistic/Naturalistic setting and Romantic characters. Lynda – Like Frederick Douglass Dr. White – In Realism/Naturalism we
have a sensitivity to classes, but the characters are discussed as individuals.
Even in modern culture it is easier to talk about individuals. Jennifer – Leaving the environment to
develop talents distinctive to classes between male and female characters Dr. White – Yes, the same way Dendy is
describing Hugh as wanting to move beyond.
It is always about individuals instead of social initiatives. Dendy – What do you make of his art being made of korl, which is essentially garbage? Beth – I think it was originally
titled “Woman of Korl” but he was forced to change it Dr. White – yes, I like the way you
said that – the art is made out of waste, or garbage.
Does anyone want to comment on that? Lynda – well, what else does he have
with which to work? Beth – I saw it as a parallel to his
life Jill – the treasure is hidden – one
man’s waste is another man’s treasure.
The treasure is inherent in the material. Lynda – it’s interesting that the
owners see the workers as trash Dr. White – yes, dismissive Krisann – the mill owners see the mill
workers as hands it is like they are saying “if you only see me this way, then
I will create something with my hands to show what I’m worth.”
Almost like a sort of rebellion. Dr.
White – yes, we can link that textually on page 1215 – “Both hands
…” Jennifer – meaning field hands Dr. White – It is called synecdoche Krisann – the part representing the
whole Natasha – almost like metonymy –
strongly by association. For
example, white house Dr. White – “tropes” or figures of
speech usually take the form of a figure. The
Greek words, synecdoche, metonym, and metaphor are closely related.
Synecdoche – part stands for the whole (hands).
Metonym – a word stands for an idea (white house to stand for executive
branch) Dendy – to expand on what Krisann said
earlier about the mill workers only being “hands” there is a line on page
1224 that uses the word “hands” to describe the mill workers.
“Have you many such hands …” This
supports Krisann’s idea. Dr. White – yes, those lines combine
both elements well. There is
another on the next page “these men who do the lowest part of the world’s
work should be machines, -- nothing more, -- hands” Beth – there are several instances of
machines in the text Dr. White – Here is where Realism and
Romanticism continually run into each other.
This is like Thoreau’s ideas about the machinery of society.
Here the iron mill represents machinery.
Romantics resist this “We resist the idea that men are machines.”
It’s like the different views of jail from Thoreau to this story.
Here is where you go to die. Jill – it’s not even called a jail;
it's a "stone house." Lynda – the honest man is in jail Dr. White – he’s not really the
honest man. We just want to support
him. Thoreau was willing to give up
material comfort, but Hugh wanted “full development” not
“self-restraint.” The mill
owner told him what he needed – money – this is a preview to Realism.
You have to have a standard of living before you can give something up.
Hugh didn’t have that. This is a transitional piece and the
characteristics of Romanticism and Realism almost stand up and announce
themselves. City = Hell, disease
and poverty. The country = heaven,
decent lives. Lynda – Like during the Depression.
The people in the country could survive because of their gardens. Kayla – the Quaker lady is described. Dr. White – yes the Quaker
meetinghouse = simplicity Dendy – Deb’s association with the
Quaker lady makes her more domestic. One
of the Romantic objectives involves the “domestic romance” (Objective 2D) The discussion ends after Dr. White reviews Davis’ use of the gothic in the selection. |