2012
DOI: 10.1017/s1060150312000034
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Representing the “Hungry Forties” in Image and Verse: The Politics of Hunger in Early-Victorian Illustrated Periodicals

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…My contention is that repeating the pattern of redressing social evils by the application of the rules of political economy, or the restoration of conditions that make their operation possible, which underlie many of Martineau's novellas, produce different meanings and reflect different, less unambiguously affirmative attitudes to capitalism and the economic 'laws' in Charlotte Bront€ e's Shirley, published over a decade later and in a different historical context. The 1840s, 'a decade that has come to acquire a special connection with "hunger" in historical discourse', 13 was a period of economic depression, massive unemployment, low wages and soaring prices of bread. The crisis was aggravated by bad harvests and social unrest born of the desperate economic condition of the working classes and their growing radicalism.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…My contention is that repeating the pattern of redressing social evils by the application of the rules of political economy, or the restoration of conditions that make their operation possible, which underlie many of Martineau's novellas, produce different meanings and reflect different, less unambiguously affirmative attitudes to capitalism and the economic 'laws' in Charlotte Bront€ e's Shirley, published over a decade later and in a different historical context. The 1840s, 'a decade that has come to acquire a special connection with "hunger" in historical discourse', 13 was a period of economic depression, massive unemployment, low wages and soaring prices of bread. The crisis was aggravated by bad harvests and social unrest born of the desperate economic condition of the working classes and their growing radicalism.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%