Life In The Iron Mills Summary

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It takes a lot of effort to be able to understand another person’s feelings and motives in life since we live in such judgmental society. “Empathy is a virtue that not all people may have”. Social division amongst the great nation was at its peak during the time throughout expansion of the Industrial Revolution. In “Life in the Iron Mills,” Rebecca Harding Davis unveiled the dehumanization and oppression of the factory workers and their families. She vividly revealed the communal conditions immigrants endured even though they were the ones that constructed the supplies that aided American in its building of a new nation. Davis intensely exemplifies the separation between the American classes. As the affluent citizens lived in entirely separate …show more content…

As the narrator looked upon the polluted and disruptive town, he or she was reminded of a story about the former family that occupied the house that they were currently inhabiting. The narrator introduces the character Deborah; she was expressed as a hardworking, hunchback women who was married to a hardworking, factory worker named Hugh. One afternoon, a young girl from the around the neighborhood named Janey was sent to their home by Hugh. Deborah analyzed how young and beautiful Janey was; she realized that that was no longer her. This caused Deborah to be a bit jealous. Janey told Deborah how Hugh did not have his lunch with him for today. Concerned, Deborah walks for miles in the pouring rain just to make sure that her husband has his …show more content…

It exposes how the higher social classes were blinded by their very own success and how they did not care about the people that was making it possible for them to live their upper-class life style. Thus, factory workers, their families, and other unskilled laborers were forced to live in an overcrowded, tarnished houses and very small apartments. Because of their mistreatment and struggling condition, they suppress their problems and emotions by indulging in the comforts of alcohol consumption. Davis imagery allows the readers to connect to the “reality of soul-starvation, of living death, that meets you every day under that besotted faces on the street”. “Life in the Iron Mills,” exposes the truth and the misery of the struggles of the working class and how unjust the American class structure

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