9780367353483_oachapter7.pdf

From the beginning of the genre, women writers have made a major contribution to the development of industrial writing. Although prevented from gaining first-hand experience of the coalface, Welsh women writers were amongst the first to try to fictionalize those heavy industries—coal and metal in th...

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Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2019
Online Access:https://www.routledge.com/Womens-Writing-from-Wales-before-1914-1st-Edition/Aaron/p/book/9780367353483
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-238462024-03-22T19:23:09Z Chapter 7 Welsh Women's Industrial Fiction 1880-1910 Bohata, Kirsti Jones, Alexandra 1914 Aaron before Jane Wales Women's Writing thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies From the beginning of the genre, women writers have made a major contribution to the development of industrial writing. Although prevented from gaining first-hand experience of the coalface, Welsh women writers were amongst the first to try to fictionalize those heavy industries—coal and metal in the south, and slate in the north—which dominated the lives of the majority of the late nineteenth-century Welsh population. Treatment of industrial matter is generally fragmentary in this early women’s writing; industrial imagery and metaphor may be used in novels that are not primarily “about” industry at all. Yet from c. 1880–1910, Welsh women writers made a significant—and hitherto critically neglected—attempt to make sense in literature of contemporary industrial Wales in powerful and innovative ways. This essay maps their contribution and considers anglophone Welsh women writers’ adaptations and innovations of form (particularly romance) as they try to find a way of representing industrial landscapes, communities and the daily realities of industrial labour. It identifies the genesis in women’s writing of tropes that would become central to later industrial fiction, including depictions of industrial accident, injury, death and disability. And it explores the representation of social relations (class, gender, ethnicity, sexuality) and conflict on this tumultuous, dangerous new stage. 2019-11-12 12:10:19 2020-04-01T09:30:37Z 2020-04-01T09:30:37Z 2019 chapter 1006292 OCN: 1135854436 9780429330865 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/23846 eng Historical Women's Writing application/pdf n/a 9780367353483_oachapter7.pdf https://www.routledge.com/Womens-Writing-from-Wales-before-1914-1st-Edition/Aaron/p/book/9780367353483 Taylor & Francis Women’s Writing from Wales before 1914 Routledge 10.1080/09699082.2016.1268346 10.1080/09699082.2016.1268346 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 302b7a94-d43c-48f6-a154-cc713b75b4ae 9780429330865 Routledge 18 2019-11-12 12:01:53, Funding program name: Wellcome Trust Programme Award/ Funding project name Disability and Industrial Society: A Comparative Cultural History of British Coalfields, 1780-1948' / Funding grant number: 095948/Z/11/Z open access
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language English
description From the beginning of the genre, women writers have made a major contribution to the development of industrial writing. Although prevented from gaining first-hand experience of the coalface, Welsh women writers were amongst the first to try to fictionalize those heavy industries—coal and metal in the south, and slate in the north—which dominated the lives of the majority of the late nineteenth-century Welsh population. Treatment of industrial matter is generally fragmentary in this early women’s writing; industrial imagery and metaphor may be used in novels that are not primarily “about” industry at all. Yet from c. 1880–1910, Welsh women writers made a significant—and hitherto critically neglected—attempt to make sense in literature of contemporary industrial Wales in powerful and innovative ways. This essay maps their contribution and considers anglophone Welsh women writers’ adaptations and innovations of form (particularly romance) as they try to find a way of representing industrial landscapes, communities and the daily realities of industrial labour. It identifies the genesis in women’s writing of tropes that would become central to later industrial fiction, including depictions of industrial accident, injury, death and disability. And it explores the representation of social relations (class, gender, ethnicity, sexuality) and conflict on this tumultuous, dangerous new stage.
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publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2019
url https://www.routledge.com/Womens-Writing-from-Wales-before-1914-1st-Edition/Aaron/p/book/9780367353483
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