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The England of Marx and Mill as Reflected in Fiction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 February 2011

William O. Aydelotte
Affiliation:
State University of Iowa

Extract

The economic distress and the new concern with social problems in England in the 1840's, which underlay the reformulations of political economy in that decade, had also an extensive and significant reflection in imaginative literature. While the novel with a thesis, even a social thesis, was nothing new, it was only in the forties that English literature began to deal on a major scale with the social problems raised by the industrial revolution. One can sense in the novels of this decade an increased urgency and pressure, a more daring and direct attack. This emphasis is so marked that one critic has attempted a correlation between literature and socialism, and has sought to find in the novels of Dickens the same type of social observation and emotional reaction that prompted the analyses of Karl Marx. While such a thesis goes too far and is almost certainly invalid, one can nevertheless find in these novels a historical meaning of a different sort, more complex, but also more interesting and suggestive to the historian.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Economic History Association 1948

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References

1 Jackson, T. A., Charles Dickens, the Progress of a Radical (New York: International Publishers Co., 1938)Google Scholar.

2 For some of the suggestions in this paragraph I am indebted to my colleague, Walter Metzger.