Urbanization in North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell

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The title of the novel, North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell reinforces the idea of the conflicts that surround urbanisation as the north (Milton) represents industrialisation and all things new while the south (Helstone) encompasses urban living and the past. This essay aims to discuss the different layers of conflict between the north and the south and how the novel may be read as both an industrial novel and a romance novel. This essay aims to discuss how the novel tackles the conflicts in society which eventually leads to the romantic interests of the novel representing a connection between the two worlds of the past and the present.
The Victorian era prevailed under the reign of Queen Victoria, thus the realist novel emerged during this era with industrialisation taking place and the age of improvement occurring, society felt both optimistic about the future and pessimistic about the uncertainties it holds . Realism texts like, North and South is a mimetic novel as it attempts to to hold up a mirror to society, to the conditions in England at the time and the conflicts that surrounded it in order for the readers to become reflective of the world. Gaskell lived in this time period and thus stands in as a didactic writer, meaning a writer who intends to teach a lesson, North and South reflects the consequences of industrialisation by revealing, responding and interpreting public conflicts, conflicts of the individual and conflicts of society . Gaskell then uses the theme of romance to draw in the readers.
The train and the invention of the steam engine plays an important role in the novel as it is a modern invention and also the creation of the train lead to the construction of railroads which essentially changes the urban ...

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...ith modernity and their resolution held a hope and understanding for the future. This essay has discussed how the novel tackles the conflicts in society which eventually leads to the romantic interests of the novel representing a connection between the two worlds of the past and the present.

Works Cited

B. Knezevic, “The Novel as a Cultural Geogrophy: Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South”, SRAZ LVI, 85-105 (2011).

Beck, R. H. “What is Romantic Love? Margaret Hale and Ruby Ruggels Reply.” The Victorian Web. 1995, Available URL: http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/trollope/rhbromance.html

Craik, W.A. “Elizabeth Gaskell and the English Provincial Novel.” London: Metheun and Co Ltd, 1975.

Gaskell, E, “North and South”, London: Penguin Books, 1986.
Walker, Hugh. The Literature of the Victorian Era. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1910

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