Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel

This article reads Karl Marx’s <i>Capital</i> (volume 1, 1867) as the <i>Bildungsroman</i> of a congenital criminal: its eponymous character, Capital. Following Friedrich Engels’s <i>The Condition of the Working Class in England</i> (1845), Marx detects and dissec...

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Main Author: Jayson Althofer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-01-01
Series:Humanities
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/1/9
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author Jayson Althofer
author_facet Jayson Althofer
author_sort Jayson Althofer
collection DOAJ
description This article reads Karl Marx’s <i>Capital</i> (volume 1, 1867) as the <i>Bildungsroman</i> of a congenital criminal: its eponymous character, Capital. Following Friedrich Engels’s <i>The Condition of the Working Class in England</i> (1845), Marx detects and dissects capitalism’s crimes. <i>Capital</i> has been called Marx’s ‘Victorian novel’ and compared to English realism’s triple-deckers. Yet his indispensable informants include factory inspectors whose reports, according to Fredric Jameson, provide testimony beyond anything realism can represent. How, then, does Marx’s apparently realist aesthetic convey Capital’s criminal deeds and criminogenic drive? To address this matter, the article examines the Gothicism of Marx’s realism. It highlights his development of Engels’s Gothic realism, demonstrates how <i>Capital</i> begins <i>in media res</i>—its first sentence presenting an immense, monstrous collection of evidence of Capital’s cannibalism—and links this opening crime scene to Marx’s portrayal of the 1863 case of Mary Anne Walkley. Murdered in her workplace, Walkley inhabits an underworld overpopulated by fellow workers killed by wage-labour. The article argues that, because actuality under the rule of Capital is structurally and monstrously criminal, Marx’s Gothic constitutes a realistic medium to represent criminal monsters and structures.
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spelling doaj-art-a118b7fd7859443dbde0ec5e2d164c0f2025-01-24T13:34:50ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872025-01-01141910.3390/h14010009Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian NovelJayson Althofer0Independent Researcher, Toowoomba, QLD 4350, AustraliaThis article reads Karl Marx’s <i>Capital</i> (volume 1, 1867) as the <i>Bildungsroman</i> of a congenital criminal: its eponymous character, Capital. Following Friedrich Engels’s <i>The Condition of the Working Class in England</i> (1845), Marx detects and dissects capitalism’s crimes. <i>Capital</i> has been called Marx’s ‘Victorian novel’ and compared to English realism’s triple-deckers. Yet his indispensable informants include factory inspectors whose reports, according to Fredric Jameson, provide testimony beyond anything realism can represent. How, then, does Marx’s apparently realist aesthetic convey Capital’s criminal deeds and criminogenic drive? To address this matter, the article examines the Gothicism of Marx’s realism. It highlights his development of Engels’s Gothic realism, demonstrates how <i>Capital</i> begins <i>in media res</i>—its first sentence presenting an immense, monstrous collection of evidence of Capital’s cannibalism—and links this opening crime scene to Marx’s portrayal of the 1863 case of Mary Anne Walkley. Murdered in her workplace, Walkley inhabits an underworld overpopulated by fellow workers killed by wage-labour. The article argues that, because actuality under the rule of Capital is structurally and monstrously criminal, Marx’s Gothic constitutes a realistic medium to represent criminal monsters and structures.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/1/9Karl Marx (1818–1883)Friedrich Engels (1820–1895)Capitalworkcrimerealism
spellingShingle Jayson Althofer
Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel
Humanities
Karl Marx (1818–1883)
Friedrich Engels (1820–1895)
Capital
work
crime
realism
title Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel
title_full Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel
title_fullStr Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel
title_short Beyond Anything Realism Can Represent? Monstrous Crime in Marx’s Victorian Novel
title_sort beyond anything realism can represent monstrous crime in marx s victorian novel
topic Karl Marx (1818–1883)
Friedrich Engels (1820–1895)
Capital
work
crime
realism
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/14/1/9
work_keys_str_mv AT jaysonalthofer beyondanythingrealismcanrepresentmonstrouscrimeinmarxsvictoriannovel