Mary Barton

by

Elizabeth Gaskell

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Themes and Colors
Employers vs. Workers Theme Icon
Sexuality and Danger Theme Icon
Christianity Theme Icon
Poverty and Morality Theme Icon
Empathy vs. Ignorance Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Mary Barton, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Employers vs. Workers

In Mary Barton, class conflict between capitalist employers and the workers they employ does not stem from economic principles or divergent class interests. Rather, the novel argues that employers’ and workers’ interests are intimately bound together—but that employers nevertheless alienate and embitter workers by failing to communicate appropriately with them.

Set in the first half of the 19th century in the English manufacturing town of Manchester, Mary Barton focuses on the conditions and effects…

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Sexuality and Danger

Mary Barton represents sexuality as fundamentally dangerous—especially to women, but also to working-class men. The novel opens with a discussion of Esther, a young factory worker who has disappeared from her lodging house. Her brother-in-law John Barton immediately assumes that Esther has become embroiled in a premarital romance and will likely end up a sex worker. Subsequent revelations prove him right: Esther has eloped with an army officer who has promised to marry her…

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Christianity

In Mary Barton, Christian religious virtues such as faith, hope, and love are presented as necessary to a good life and death. Without these virtues, characters go astray, sin, and suffer. For example, Manchester factory worker John Barton loses his religious faith due to the disjunction between the teachings he reads in the Bible and the way the so-called “Christians” around him behave, since these people seem to tolerate glaring forms of inequality. When…

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Poverty and Morality

Mary Barton represents poor people as more likely to act in moral ways than rich people—not because poor people have inherently better moral instincts, but because they are more likely to encounter, recognize, and thus react to others’ needs. Throughout the novel, working-class characters see one another in distress and respond by giving generous aid. For instance, Margaret, a working-class girl with worsening cataracts, sews mourning clothes for an impoverished new widow for free…

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Empathy vs. Ignorance

In Mary Barton, empathy springs from knowledge: when people understand the facts of one another’s situations, they empathize with and help one another. By contrast, when people don’t understand one another’s situations, they are more likely to be unsympathetic, callous, cruel, or simply indifferent. Thus, the novel implies that people have a moral duty to be curious about one another’s lives. Frequently in the novel, one character will be hostile or cruel to another…

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