Online Talk: South and North rather than North and South: The ‘Big Strike’ Novel

To mark the centenary of the 1926 General Strike, Professor Michael Sanders (University of Manchester) will deliver an online talk on Wednesday 20 May at 7pm covering two Mancunian female trailblazers.

An image of the study at Elizabeth Gaskell’s House
[click to enlarge]

Elizabeth Gaskell may have been one of the first to write a ‘picket-line’ romance, in her much-loved classic North and South, but she was certainly not the last. In the centenary year of the ‘General Strike’ we uncover another novel which combines romance with industrial relations – Clash by another iconic Manchester woman: Ellen Wilkinson, one of the first women Labour MPs (Member of Parliament) and best known for leading the ‘Jarrow March’ of the unemployed in 1936.
 
In 1926 Ellen Wilkinson spoke at rallies and meetings in support of the ‘General Strike’, when workers walked out in of support striking miners. Three years after the strike, she published Clash, a semi-autobiographical novel in which a young woman searches for romantic and personal fulfilment in the midst of economic and social unrest. 
 
How did these two trailblazing women write about strikes? Are there any similarities between Clash and Elizabeth Gaskell’s Victorian novel? And what do these two women have to say about changing attitudes to strikers in literature?

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