Title: The Netherworld: Living In
1The Netherworld Living In Out of
Representation
- I. Living in RepresentationII. A Million
Little PiecesIII. Living out of Representation
2I. Living in Representation
- Why does the novel make continued references and
allusions to other media? - Why does Gissing continue to remind us that we
live in representation?
3I. Living in RepresentationThe Police Report
- 'On Friday, Margaret Barnes, nineteen, a
single woman, was indicted for stealing six
jackets, value 5l., the property of Mary Oaks,
her mistress. The prisoner, who cried bitterly
during the proceedings, pleaded guilty. The
prosecutrix is a single woman, and gets her
living by mantle-making, She engaged the prisoner
to do what is termed "finishing off," that is,
making the button-holes and sewing on the
buttons. The prisoner was also employed to fetch
the work from the warehouse, and deliver it when
finished. On September 7th her mistress sent her
with the six jackets, and she never returned.
Sergeant Smith, a detective, who apprehended the
prisoner, said he had made inquiries in the case,
and found that up to this time the prisoner had
borne a good character as an honest, hard-working
girl. She had quitted her former lodgings, which
had no furniture but a small table and a few rags
in a corner, and he discovered her in a room
which was perfectly bare. Miss Oaks was examined,
and said the prisoner was employed from nine in
the morning to eight at night. The Judge How
much did you pay her per week? Miss Oaks Four
shillings. The Judge Did you give her her food?
Miss Oaks No I only get one shilling each for
the jackets myself when completed. I have to use
two sewing-machines, find my own cotton and
needles, and I can, by working hard, make two in
a day. The Judge said it was a sad state of
things. (54-55)
4I. Living in RepresentationLetters
- 'I don't begin with no deering, because it's a
plaid out thing, and because I'm riting to too
people at onse, both mother and Clem, and it's so
long since I've had a pen in my hand I've harf
forgot how to use it. If you think I'm making my
pile, you think rong, so you've got no need to
ask me when I'm going to send money home, like
you did in the last letter. (Clems Brother
147). - 'DEAR MOTHER,--The old feller has gawn of it
apened at jest after six e'clock if you want to
now I shall come and sea you at ten 'clock
to-morow moning and I beleve hes got the will but
hes a beest and theers a game up you may take
your hothe so I remain C. S.' (Clem 326)
5I. Living in RepresentationDickens
PreRaphaelites
- Gissing on DickensLondon as a place of squalid
mystery and terror, of the grimly grotesque, of
labyrinthine obscurity and lurid fascination, is
Dickenss own he taught people a certain way of
regarding the huge city, and to this day how
common it is to see London with Dickenss eyes.
6I. Living in RepresentationDickens
PreRaphaelites
- Clem
- A cloth was already spread across one end of the
deal table, with such other preparations for a
meal as Clem deemed adequate. The sausages--five
in number--she had emptied from the frying-pan
directly on to her plate, and with them all the
black rich juice that had exuded in the process
of cooking--particularly rich, owing to its
having several times caught fire and blazed
triumphantly (Gissing, 6). In a frying-pan,
which was on the fire, and which was secured to
the mantelshelf by a string, some sausages were
cooking and standing over them, with a
toasting-fork in his hand, was a very old
shrivelled Jew, whose villanous-looking and
repulsive face was obscured by a quantity of
matted red hair (Dickens, Oliver Twist).
7I. Living in RepresentationDickens
PreRaphaelites
- Clem
- There was no denying that Clem was handsomeat
sixteen she had all her charms in apparent
maturity, and they were of the coarsely
magnificent order. Her forehead was low and of
great width her nose was well shapen, and had
large sensual apertures her cruel lips may be
seen on certain fine antique busts the neck that
supported her heavy head was splendidly rounded.
In laughing, she became a model for an artist, an
embodiment of fierce life independent of
morality. Her health was probably less sound than
it seemed to be one would have compared her, not
to some piece of exuberant normal vegetation, but
rather to a rank, evilly-fostered growth. The
putrid soil of that nether world yields other
forms besides the obviously blighted and sapless.
(8)
8Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Proserpine, 1874.
9I. Living in RepresentationPortraits Books
- Clara'I wish I could neither read nor write! I
wish I had never been told that there is anything
better than to work with one's hands and earn
daily bread!' (82) -
- In passing a shop-window where photographs were
exposed, she looked for those of actresses, and
gazed at them with terrible intensity. 'I am as
good-looking as she is. Why shouldn't _my_
portrait be seen some day in the windows?' And
then her heart throbbed, smitten with passionate
desire. (82) - It was a novel (with a picture on the cover
which seemed designed to repel any person not
wholly without taste), and might perhaps serve
the end of averting her thoughts from their one
subject. . . . The story was better than its
illustration it took a hold upon her she read
all day long. But when she returned to herself,
it was to find that she had been exasperating her
heart's malady. The book dealt with people of
wealth and refinement, with the world to which
she had all her life been aspiring, and to which
she might have attained. (276)
10I. Living in RepresentationMaps
- Look at a map of greater London, a map on which
the town proper shows as a dark, irregularly
rounded patch against the whiteness of suburban
districts, and just on the northern limit of the
vast network of streets you will distinguish the
name of Crouch End. Another decade, and the dark
patch will have spread greatly further for the
present, Crouch End is still able to remind one
that it was in the country a very short time ago.
The streets have a smell of newness, of dampness
the bricks retain their complexion, the stucco
has not rotted more than one expects in a year or
two poverty tries to hide itself with venetian
blinds, until the time when an advanced guard of
houses shall justify the existence of the slum
(364).
11I.Living in RepresentationThe Documentary
Tradition
Henry Mayhew, The Coster Girl, 1861
The Work Girl
Gustave Dore, The Flower Girl, 1872
12 II. A Million Little Pieces
James Frey and Oprah WinfreyOprah I left the
impression that the truth doesnt matter.
13III. Living out of Representation
- Do You Agree or Disagree?
- If in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde there is an
interesting tension between old and new in its
production of the urban gothic, this novel seems
to suggest that the old has its grip on
everything, including the people too dirty and
downtrodden to exist in representation. In
the Netherworld, there is a general blight of
representation a distrust of pleasure, light,
colour in favour of mud and dirt. - Pg. 104ff--The wedding party
- Pg. 164--Getting out of East London
- Pg. 129Shooters Gardens