Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory Poems

This paper aims to explore how industrial culture shaped the poetical imaginary of Victorian women. We often fail to consider that not all factory poems spring from the minds of middle and upper-class reform-minded authors. The working-class poets produced a limited but significant number of industr...

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Main Author: Fabienne Moine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2018-06-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/3550
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author Fabienne Moine
author_facet Fabienne Moine
author_sort Fabienne Moine
collection DOAJ
description This paper aims to explore how industrial culture shaped the poetical imaginary of Victorian women. We often fail to consider that not all factory poems spring from the minds of middle and upper-class reform-minded authors. The working-class poets produced a limited but significant number of industrial and largely autobiographical poems too. The first objective of this paper is to present the voices of the upper and middle-class women poets, who show sympathy for the labourers as they try to advance the cause of the female workers. In their poems, they denounce the horrendous working conditions in factories and the mechanistic dehumanization of workers. I wish then to confront these voices with the ones of the working-class women poets who depict a different image of the factory girls: they were concerned with the conservative values of the family and the nation that factory girls could convey, in spite of their degraded condition. The absence of work and factories in their poems is compensated for by the representations of the productive and reproductive potential of these factory girls and by those of matrimonial and patriotic desire. Finally, ‘factory girls’, who write autobiographical poems and construct their subjectivity as real insiders, produce factory poems that give prestige and dignity to manual work and that develop their pride, their working-class consciousness and their sense of communal solidarity. If they often copy bourgeois poems by adopting middle-class subjectivity and sentimentalism useful to gain respectability and visibility, they also try to resist the bourgeois poetical codes by writing their own kind of factory poems. The confrontation of these poetic voices shows that there is no clear-cut and unique response to industrialization and mechanization among Victorian women poets.
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spelling doaj-art-84ff1d1ef3444b68a306d07cd3fbf4002025-01-30T10:22:32ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492018-06-018710.4000/cve.3550Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory PoemsFabienne MoineThis paper aims to explore how industrial culture shaped the poetical imaginary of Victorian women. We often fail to consider that not all factory poems spring from the minds of middle and upper-class reform-minded authors. The working-class poets produced a limited but significant number of industrial and largely autobiographical poems too. The first objective of this paper is to present the voices of the upper and middle-class women poets, who show sympathy for the labourers as they try to advance the cause of the female workers. In their poems, they denounce the horrendous working conditions in factories and the mechanistic dehumanization of workers. I wish then to confront these voices with the ones of the working-class women poets who depict a different image of the factory girls: they were concerned with the conservative values of the family and the nation that factory girls could convey, in spite of their degraded condition. The absence of work and factories in their poems is compensated for by the representations of the productive and reproductive potential of these factory girls and by those of matrimonial and patriotic desire. Finally, ‘factory girls’, who write autobiographical poems and construct their subjectivity as real insiders, produce factory poems that give prestige and dignity to manual work and that develop their pride, their working-class consciousness and their sense of communal solidarity. If they often copy bourgeois poems by adopting middle-class subjectivity and sentimentalism useful to gain respectability and visibility, they also try to resist the bourgeois poetical codes by writing their own kind of factory poems. The confrontation of these poetic voices shows that there is no clear-cut and unique response to industrialization and mechanization among Victorian women poets.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/3550poetryautobiographyVictorian womenclassmachinemechanization
spellingShingle Fabienne Moine
Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory Poems
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
poetry
autobiography
Victorian women
class
machine
mechanization
title Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory Poems
title_full Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory Poems
title_fullStr Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory Poems
title_full_unstemmed Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory Poems
title_short Voices in the Machine: Class, Subjectivity and Desire in Victorian Women’s Factory Poems
title_sort voices in the machine class subjectivity and desire in victorian women s factory poems
topic poetry
autobiography
Victorian women
class
machine
mechanization
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/3550
work_keys_str_mv AT fabiennemoine voicesinthemachineclasssubjectivityanddesireinvictorianwomensfactorypoems