Gaskell's North and South

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At a time when England was experiencing tremendous growth and change, Elizabeth Gaskell began her first novel, North and South, highlighting the condition of industrial England. Staggering poverty coupled with immense prosperity offered a duality unmatched by any other time period in England’s economic history. “The whole assemblage of buildings is commonly called Manchester, and contains about four hundred thousand inhabitants, rather more than less” (Broadview 58). Manchester, England, presented the stark contrast between middle and lower classes, as men became not only masters, but masters of men. A natural division between masters and men prevailed and problems began to occur within the class system – “the working people’s quarters are sharply separated from the sections of the city reserved for the middle class; or if this does not succeed, they are concealed with the cloak of charity” (59). As can be expected, upheaval and unrest in the form of strikes and riots became the mainstay, and the people of England were left scratching their heads about how to appropriately deal with the working/lower-class problem. Elizabeth Gaskell lived in Manchester, the heart of the manufacturing district where the majority of strikes were occurring, and it is known that “North and South was her explicit contribution to the discussion of strikes and labor disputes” (Elliot 28). By openly declaring her “sympathy with the working classes, (Gaskell) felt a moral responsibility to alleviate the negative side effects of industrial capitalism and to promote class harmony” (29). If North and South was created to act as Gaskell’s explicit contribution to right the wrongs between classes and to alleviate side effects of capitalism, so too can it be... ... middle of paper ... ...nature. Thornton's love for Margaret Hale induces him to become a better, more affectionate employer, ever more conscious of his social responsibility to his workers. Margaret Hale is associated with the good life as it relates to the principles of truth, justice, and altruism, and she comes to possess a greater degree of individuality. She enters Milton as an independent and autonomous woman and aptly demonstrates the value of women’s mediation between the classes. The relationship of Margaret and Thornton shows that familiarity with the other’s language leads to understanding, which leads to affection and cooperation. In the end, she is able to join her young self with the older and wiser woman she has become through observing and analyzing the behavior of her acquaintances, to form the type of woman needed to successfully face the changes occurring in society.

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