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The enormously
energetic working-class reading cultures occupying the core of
Jonathan Roses magnificent study grew up from rather unpromising
roots. For long periods, reading, like publishing, could be a
dangerous business. In the sixteenth century, Thomas Cranmer
had proposed to confiscate heretical texts and prosecute
bible readers; and, as Rose informs us, at least
twenty people were burned for discussing heresy between 1539
to 1546. We can see where Cranmer was coming from: just
like Carlo Ginzburgs Mennochio the Miller, in The Cheese
and the Worms (Routledge & Kegan Paul; London, 1980),
those who could read might develop critical, political views
or levelling tendencies. Robert Darntons Forbidden Bestsellers
of Pre-Revolutionary France (W.W. Norton; New York and London,
1995) shows that the authorities, fully in awe of the power of
the word, worked themselves into frenzies about books, burning
dummy tomes and imprisoning booksellers. In these early times,
publishing and reading might have carried a health warning.
Nevertheless, if a vigorous reading culture could be developed
and maintained in earlier times, against such zealous policing,
then we might expect that those who had the tools to do so would
read as much of anything as they could. Indeed, one of the themes
of Roses massive, evocative book is the indiscipline with
which the discipline of reading was developed. Learning to read
required staying power. Finding time to read inevitably meant
rubbing against that great monolith, work; but even so, the reading
culture of the working classes, from the eighteenth century onwards,
was widespread, sometimes indiscriminate, and occasionally lacking
in an internal logic except to say that reading, any sort
of reading, was somehow good for mind and soul. Thus, in the
1930s, Welsh miners read Das Kapital, Jane Eyre,
and Tarzan of the Apes.
Rose owes an enormous debt of gratitude to John Burnett, David
Mayall and David Vincent (which he fully acknowledges), for it
was their exhaustive compilation of working-class autobiographies
[The Autobiography of the Working Class. An Annotated Critical
Bibliography (3 vols; Harvester; Brighton, 1984-89] that
provided the springboard for the Intellectual Life of the
British Working Classes. Rose also follows in the tradition
of Vincents important books, Bread, Knowledge and Freedom
(Europa; London, 1981) and Literacy and Popular Culture. England
1750-1914 (Cambridge University Press; Cambridge, 1989).
Roses study also might be seen as a development from John
Careys The Intellectuals and the Masses. Pride and Prejudice
amongst the Literary Intelligentsia, 1880-1939 (Faber and
Faber; London, 1992). Although Rose's and Careys are different
types of studies, they share at least one common theme: the impact
of a working-class desire to consume a culture normally associated
with those who were traditionally highly educated. Carey's and
Roses modernist writersnotably, Shaw and Lawrence
were fearful of the impact of a wider reading culture;
they were also perhaps surprised at the success of those who
produced popular fiction for the masses. Perhaps the elites
had seen the way things really were. After all, if a Welsh miner
would read Marx and the Brontës but not Woolf and ONeill,
it might be that the latter authors, not the readers, had got
it wrong. Or perhaps the miners of Wales were snobs, preferring
real classics of literature to (what were then, among
the middle classes, at any rate) modish books?
Whereas Carey focuses on elite grumblings about the baseness
of working-class reading habits and their potentially challenging
effects, Rose aims to elevate the working class from the position
of unthinking consumers of low culture. Rose also
seeks to show that not everything the ordinary man or woman read
was trashy and inferior. Working-class people may not have read
books with an academic vision, but they still sought classics
and highbrow works. Moreover, those who thirsted for reading
material were not only men. There was surprise and even alarm
that women accounted for eight and 13 per cent respectively of
subscribers to Alexander Popes Iliad and Odyssey.
This situation was not considered agreeable by the men of the
early eighteenth century. Rose reminds us of the comment of Thomas
Burnet and George Duckett: because of Pope, every Country
Milkmaid may understand the Illiad as well as you or I.
Not milkmaids, perhaps; but women, nevertheless. Similar fears
were expressed with respect of how reading might affect men well
above the social rank of the common farm servant. Francis Place,
the noted nineteenth-century political activist and tailor, had
orders cancelled by middle-class clients who could not stomach
the idea of a needle-smith like him possessing more than 1000
books. And the pressure to conform to a particular (much narrower)
reading culture than the likes of Place could countenance, also
caused problems in the twentieth century. Not unlike a sketch
from Monty Python, some families were worried when their kin
came out as thinkers, writers and aesthetes. An Irish
labourer in Scotland, who tried to write (rather than simply
read) literature was horribly scorned by his brother: If
youd just been a poof the priest could have talked to you
or one of us could have battered it out of you. But what the
hell can anyone do about a writer?
While Roses book springs from a important tradition of
working-class history, this does not mean that the Intellectual
Life of the British Working Classes does not stand on its
own it does, most assuredly so. It is, in fact, a brilliantly
illuminating analysis of the impulses that shaped working-class
reading culture, from sheer autodidactism, early education reform,
revolutions in printing, working mens clubs, the settlement
movement, theatre and music hall, the Workers Educational
Association, the Open University, and much else besides. This
is a book about what people read before radio and television
took over their lives (though it is also about what sort of radio
they liked to listen to and it was not all low-brow stuff).
Nor was what they read merely restricted to popular fiction;
at the same time as workers eschewed the modernists they were
also reading H. L. Gates revelatory account of the Armenian
massacres of 1915 [Ravished Armenia; or, "The Auction
of Souls" (1919)]. Predictably, at around the same time,
Robert Tressells Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
(first published 1914) was well-thumbed by members of the same
class as the heroes of the book: you did not have to be a future
MP to exclaim at the tuberculosis of Owen or wince at the grisly
self-slaughter of Nimrod.
Roses task of recording, reporting and explaining is made
more difficult by his subjects refusal to be bound by simple
or uniform ideals. A singular theory thus escapes us. We might
have expected to be able to chart working-class reading culture
according to a simple model or two: but this cannot happen. Individual
choices as well as common moods and shared fashions rest at the
heart of Roses book as a result, his thesis is complicated
and multi-layered. Autodidactic culture did not simply die out
with the education reforms of the mid-nineteenth century: neither
Forster nor Mundella fundamentally changed the way many people
thought about the world of their reading. Increasing literacy
levels simply opened up new possibilities. Far from producing
a dull, conformist intellectual gruel, schooling provided ordinary
men and women with further filters to apply to their vision of
the world; and the skills in reading which might otherwise have
been more difficult to achieve, were instead instilled by the
state. Interestingly, then, few of the autobiographers and diarists
used by Rose express loathing of school; most, in fact, seem
to have been content there. This might simply be because school
appeared easy next to work I remember this as a genuinely
and wistfully expressed view among my own fathers peers
as they trudged off to work in the local shipyard. Schooldays
were indeed the happiest days when much of the rest of adult
life would be spent sweating inside torpedo tubes and the like
with red-hot and dangerous welding all around. Such approval
for school undoubtedly also developed among those who wrote of
their lives because, without the core elements of education,
no such task could have been undertaken. Whatever the cause of
this obsession with the written word, visitors to Britain from
overseas continued to be amazed about how much the working classes
read. Elsewhere, according to Carl Moritz (1782), reading was
restricted to the higher order; in Britain, it was pervasive
and crossed the lines of class.
Equally, the independence of thought and action which is implied
in the miraculous tales of weavers or miners skimming the pages
during (or between) bouts of work does not lead to the emergence
of a simple, teleological relationship between literacy and politics.
True, weavers could be (and were) radical; true, they also had
prodigiously high literacy levels (as noted in the west Lowlands
of Scotland). This was because a book could be propped up on
the weaving frame and read as the shuttle flew. We know of the
weavers literacy rates because of the levels at which they
subscribed to magazines and periodicals. And it is also true
that they were early to organise in protection of their craft
(though technological change meant they had to). But reading
did not lead straight into Chartism or the Labour Party. It could
also lead towards a conservative disposition on the part of some;
it also created that curious breed the working-class Tory, all
imperial loyalty and Primrose League. What reading mainly did,
which cut across political affiliations, was to create a questioning
mind. As well as that, it also caused the welling up of a generalised
appreciation of the brilliance of the book and a worship of culture
as a thing to consume.
Less surprising than the complicated class position of reading,
however, is the fact that women were less well represented than
men, as poets, writers or indeed as known consumers of texts.
This remained the case until probably the later nineteenth century.
In even more general terms, Rose subscribes to the view that
the dictum knowledge is power really meant something
to the pre-twentieth-century worker. We might also add that the
power ran in numerous different ways. There can be no doubt that
reading bonded people into social groups; and when it did this,
it also held out the chance of creating political linkages. Thus,
Rose rightly highlights the miners institutes of South
Wales as one of the greatest networks of cultural institutions
created by working people anywhere in the world. By the
Second World War, for instance, the Tredegar Workmens Institute
had a library that circulated 100,000 volumes per year, a cinema
that could seat 800, celebrity concerts, a film society and other
events to demonstrate the cultural homogeneity of that community.
The list of what these people read is bewildering. The working
man and woman were always more likely to consume yellow press
and penny dreadful productions than were the middle classes;
but they, too, knew and loved their classics. Few of them went
on to become great scholars of the texts they admired; but few
were without a critical sense of where their appreciation of
Shakespeare or Milton sat in relation to that of others. Among
readers, the lunchtime break from work or an evening at the CIU
club with ale in hand, could become a competitive journey around
critical views as to the meaning of this or that text. Working-class
people also appear (at least from my reading of Roses book)
to have been adept at implying social relevance and political
metaphor in the works they read. Perhaps everyone reads literature
with the present in mind. If so, it is no surprise that the horny-handed
fustian-jacketed reader saw worlds of unequal privilege upended
(or else endorsed) in works of literature.
Perhaps the most controversial of Roses chapters is the
one in which he lays down further reasons why Britain developed
no mass Marxist tradition. Some of his arguments are convincing;
others less so. Of the latter, it is controversial to claim,
as well as difficult to prove, that a mass engagement with Marxist
politics was in some way stymied by alienation from individual
British Marxists. (Support for Labour was never permanently compromised
by the lack of appeal or over-bearing zealousness of many of
Britains socialists.) Where Rose is on firmer ground is
in explaining how Marxists foolishly, we might argue
strove to undermine many of the writers upon whom Britains
prodigiously broad-based autodidactic and/or working-class educational
culture had been based. Declaring the classics of English literature
to be bourgeois was bound to remove a broad swathe of opinion
from the Marxist cause, just as the limited availability in English
of writings by European Marxists must have created something
of a vacuum. Rose points to the difficulty of Marxist writings
to explain the low rates of take-up. He is also right to imply
that the goings-on in Stalins Soviet Union were known to
ordinary men and women and must have put them off. The war may
have led to a temporary cessation of dislike for Stalinism, but
it could not last.
Rose is to be applauded for writing such a book as this. Its
dramatic effect is greatly enhanced by a superb use of quotations
from autobiographies, memoirs, letters, etc. What emerges from
these pages is a breathtakingly wide-ranging interpretative account
of what working-class people read and what they thought of literature.
How some of them found time to read is probably beyond
most modern readers; why they did so is now much clearer.
For this, and for much else, Rose deserves praise and a wide
readership.
January 2003 |