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poetry-and-industrialisation

The tension between poetic imagination and the mechanization and specialization of society during industrialization, including poetry's struggle to remain relevant.

1 chapter across 1 book

Pandaemonium: The Coming of the Machine as Seen by Contemporary Observers 1660-1886 (1985)Humphrey Jennings

5. What Motivates Us is Who We Are

This chapter emphasizes that the driving force behind the Industrial Revolution was not monetary gain but the intrinsic motivations of individuals characterized by eccentricity, idealism, and reckless generosity. It presents an 'imaginative history' through selected images and writings that reveal the complex human experiences and conflicts—social, political, and philosophical—that shaped this era. The chapter also contrasts the means of vision (imagination transforming sense impressions) with the means of production (labour transforming matter), highlighting their historical interconnection.