This section contains 5,784 words (approx. 15 pages at 400 words per page) |
In the following essay excerpt, Pfaelzer provides an overview of Margret Howth, outlining the political, social, and personal issues the novel explores. Margret Howth is also the story of the breakup of rural social structures in an emerging industrial capitalist economy. The novel begins with an image of one of the most profound changes of industrialization, the painful and repressive adjustment of a young woman who leaves home and enters the workplace for the first time. It explores how new relationships of production surrounding the woolen millwages, contracts, and competition are replacing the rural networks of family, barter, gossip, and charity. Thus Davis contrasts the atomized and defensive personalities spawned by the economy of the millKnowles, Holmes, and Joe Yareto the caring and responsible relationships of dependency sustaining those who work and live in the surrounding countryside, outside the economic aura of the mill...
This section contains 5,784 words (approx. 15 pages at 400 words per page) |