
Piston, Pen and Press
Literature, Culture and the Victorian Industrial Worker
Edinburgh University Press
Will be published approx. on 31. December 2026
Book
Hardback
252 pages
978-1-3995-5457-2 (ISBN)
Description
Based on extensive research into little-known archives this book argues that a significant proportion of Victorian industrial workers contributed to local literary culture, as writers, readers and participants in associational culture. This study concentrates on the three occupational groups at the forefront of large-scale industrial development - textile factory workers, miners, and railway workers. It argues that, for these workers, the industrial workplace created and fostered new forms of engagement with literature and culture. Additionally, it shows that working-class literary production - especially, though not exclusively, poetry - provides a means of investigating how industrial workers represented their own labour, their working communities, and their sense of identity. It combines case-studies of places, publications, occupations and associations to document the richness and variety of Victorian and Edwardian working-class literature.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Edinburgh
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
6 b&w illustrations, 1 table
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-3995-5457-2 (9781399554572)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Kirstie Blair is the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Chair in English Studies at the University of Stirling. She has published three interdisciplinary monographs on Victorian poetry and poetics, the last of which, Working Verse in Victorian Scotland: Poetry, Press, Community (2019), won the Saltire Society Research Book of the Year and overall Scottish Book of the Year awards. Over a 20+ year career in Victorian studies, she has published numerous articles, book chapters, edited two collections, and served on various editorial boards and boards of learned societies. She was elected to the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2022, and invited to deliver the British Academy Warton Lecture in English Poetry in that year. Most of her publications in the last five years have centred on popular newspaper and periodical culture, and working-class poetry and poetics. Michael Sanders is Professor of Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture at the University of Manchester. He is the author of The Poetry of Chartism: Aesthetics, Politics, History (2009), the co-editor (with Prof. David Matthews) of Subaltern Medievalisms: Medievalism 'from below' in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2021). Over a 20+ career in Victorian studies he has published; numerous articles across a range of refereed journals including, Victorian Studies, Victorian Poetry, Victorian Periodicals Review and the Journal of Victorian Culture, over a dozen book chapters, and edited the series Women and Radicalism in the Nineteenth Century (2001) and The Early Novels of Benjamin Disraeli Volume One: Vivian Grey (2004). Most of his publications have focused on the intersection between working-class literature and culture and radical politics in the nineteenth century. Oliver Betts is the Research Lead at the National Railway Museum in York. He is a historian of how technology, society, and culture intertwine in the long nineteenth-century, both in Britain and the wider Anglophone world. Above all, he is interested in how the experience of social class shaped, and was shaped by, the impact of technology. Over the last ten years he has published book chapters and articles on railway history, working-class society, museum studies, and the public history of the Victorian era, as well as being lead or contributing curator on numerous exhibitions and gallery redesigns.
Author
Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Chair in English StudiesUniversity of Stirling
Professor of Nineteenth-Century Literature and CultureUniversity of Manchester
Research Lead at the National Railway Museum in YorkNational Railway Museum in York
Content
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Poetry Columns, Workplaces and Associations - The Contexts of Victorian Working-class Literary Culture
Kirstie Blair
1. Associational Culture, Literary Pursuits and the Industrial Worker
Kirstie Blair
2. Readers and Audiences in Industrial Communities
Kirstie Blair and Oliver Betts
3. '[P]ieces...written amid the noise and confusion of a cotton mill': Poetry, Associational Culture and Class Conflict in Ashton-under-Lyne from Luddism to Liberalism
Mike Sanders
4. Mining Communities and Literary Production
Kirstie Blair and Mike Sanders
5. Rough Weaving: Literary Production in the Textile Districts
Mike Sanders and Kirstie Blair
6. Writing the Railway Revolution from the Footplate: Railway Workers' Literature in Context
Oliver Betts
Afterword: Disturbing the Dust: Finding Places of (and for) Victorian and Edwardian Working-class Writing
Mike Sanders
Bibliography
Index
Introduction: Poetry Columns, Workplaces and Associations - The Contexts of Victorian Working-class Literary Culture
Kirstie Blair
1. Associational Culture, Literary Pursuits and the Industrial Worker
Kirstie Blair
2. Readers and Audiences in Industrial Communities
Kirstie Blair and Oliver Betts
3. '[P]ieces...written amid the noise and confusion of a cotton mill': Poetry, Associational Culture and Class Conflict in Ashton-under-Lyne from Luddism to Liberalism
Mike Sanders
4. Mining Communities and Literary Production
Kirstie Blair and Mike Sanders
5. Rough Weaving: Literary Production in the Textile Districts
Mike Sanders and Kirstie Blair
6. Writing the Railway Revolution from the Footplate: Railway Workers' Literature in Context
Oliver Betts
Afterword: Disturbing the Dust: Finding Places of (and for) Victorian and Edwardian Working-class Writing
Mike Sanders
Bibliography
Index