The Theme of The Dehumanizing Impact of Industrialization in D. H. Lawrence'S
The Theme of The Dehumanizing Impact of Industrialization in D. H. Lawrence'S
INDUSTRIALIZATION IN D. H. LAWRENCE’S
WOMEN IN LOVE
Gerald is presented as the god of the machine, and workmen as mere insignificant
instruments. In the chapter "The Industrial Magnate", a shopkeeper describes how as a child
Gerald used to "kick, and scream, and struggle like a demon."(p.219). Gerald is, in fact, the
central symbol of the human death drive. In Gerald the will for chaos is rationalized into a
will for power. He has a vision of power. He looked upon the miners as his instruments. What
matters most to him is efficiency in work. The sufferings and feelings of the miners do not
matter in the least. For him man is defined by the work he does, not by his feelings. There is
no room for human emotions in him. What matters is the pure instrumentality of the
individual:
"Everything in the world has its functions, and is good or not good in so
far as it fulfills that function more or less perfectly. Was a miner a good
miner? Then he was complete. Was a manager a good manager? That was
enough. Gerald himself, who was responsible for all this industry, was he
a good director? If he were, he had fulfilled his life. The rest was by-
play." (pp.230-31).
Gerald is represented as a typical egocentric person who only thinks of himself and his own
wants and does not consider other people, and expects those around him to serve him. His
egocentric will expresses itself in the mechanization of both the work and the lives of the
miners. What he wants is the fulfillment of his will in the struggle with the conditions of life.
He does not care about money fundamentally. For him, everything including man is
measured as per its functionality. That is the value of man is measured according to how
useful he is or how many functions he can perform. Gerald exercises his will to impose a
mechanical intellectual order upon human feelings. "His will was now to take the coal out of
earth, profitably. The profit was the condition of victory, but the victory itself lay in the feat
achieved (p.231).
In Gerald's eyes, the mines are run on an old system. During the period of his father, Thomas
Crich, the pits were liking a sinking ship. It must be overhauled in order to increase the
output of the mines. Therefore, Gerald decides to examine it carefully and thoroughly and
make many changes in it in order to improve it. Gerald is explicit about his intention to
overhaul the whole system which Gerald thinks that it has run its course and is in dire need of
an overhaul and redirection. So he conducts a modernizing campaign. He is interested in the
Gerald begins to implement his reforms of the firm in the office. The first thing he thinks of
is how to reduce the expenditures as much as possible to save money. It was needful to
economize severely, to make possible the great alteration he must introduce (p. 237). He
makes cuts from the expenditures. His treacherous genius is revealed here. He makes many
deductions from the workers' wages in a very delicate narrow limited way that they hardly
notice them. Here he is depicted as a deceiving employer. He asks that the widows have to
pay for their coals, saying:
They must pay cost price henceforward. The firm is not a charity
institution, as everybody seems to think (p. 238).
The miners are, in a sense, his own men. But he sees them as objects and tools rather than as
men, as parts of the pit rather than as parts of life, and as crude raw phenomena rather than as
human being along with him. It seems as if the devil himself had let him all the fiend's wits.
Then he begins his great reform. He appoints expert engineers in every department. An
enormous electric plant is installed. New machinery is brought from America. The miners are
New machines were brought from America, such as the miners had never
seen before, great iron men, as the cutting machines were called, and
unusual appliances. The working of the pits was thoroughly changed, all
the control was taken out of the hands of the miners, the butty system was
abolished. Everything was run on the most accurate and delicate scientific
method, educated and expert men were in control everywhere, the miners
were reduced to mere mechanical instruments. They had to work hard,
much harder than before, the work was terrible and heart-breaking in its
mindlessness (p.238).
The description above is one of the most powerful passages in the novel. As a result of the
new system, the miners are reduced to the inferior state of " mere mechanical instruments",
while the new machines are given the name " great iron men". His measures to modernize his
firm are inhuman. He pensions off the old managers, the old clerks with no emotional
qualms, when they are no longer of use to him.
He substitutes clever young fellows for the old hands. The small conversation that takes place
between Gerald and his father concerning one of the pensioned employees reveals Gerald's
material thinking:
I've a pitiful letter here from Letherinton,' his father would say, in a tone
of deprecation and appeal. 'Don't you think the poor fellow might keep on
a little longer. I always fancied he did very well.'
'I've got a man in his place now, father. He'll be happier out of it, believe
me. You think his allowance is plenty, don't you?'
'It is not the allowance that he wants, poor man. He feels it very much,
that he is superannuated. He says he thought he had twenty more years of
work in himself.'
Gerald represents the factory-owner's ideal in a nutshell. The miners represent the rock-
bottom of the society, the bottom that has no bottom. Gerald, who represents the bourgeois in
a capitalist system, pretends the logical mind and, thus, imposes his ideas on the other
segments of the society. He decides to rule the roost by forcing certain ideas and authority
upon those below him without giving them the right of choice or even the right of objection.
Gerald considers himself as the absolute mind while the others as dribbling cretins. He shows
an astounding ingenuity and uncanny shrewdness of modern technical mind. Thus, the
logical premises, this up-down imposition of capitalism, must create the miners' outrage and
hatred of their employers. The accumulation of this hatred and outrage are supposedly to be
expressed in the form of violence. But, on the contrary, the miners' hatred is here suppressed.
Though they at first hate Gerald Crich, wishing him murdered, their hatred remains in their
hearts, instead of putting it into action. Instead of showing resistance, they show some fatal
satisfaction even though it destroys them. In spite of the clear-cut division in the society into
the aristocratic greedy mine-owners and the working miners, Lawrence sees no foreboding
danger of revolution in Gerald's society. The working class people live in a terrible
humiliating conditions, yet they are not serious in their attitude towards life. They do just
what they like. The men spend their money carelessly on themselves, clothes, smoking and
drinking. The following passage shows the destructive aspects of the industrial system and
the miners' response to such inhuman system:
But they submitted to it all. The joy went out of their lives, the hope
seemed to perish as they became more and more mechanized. And yet
they accepted the new conditions. They even got a further satisfaction out
of them. At first they hated Gerald Crich, they swore to do something to
him, to murder him. But as time went on, they accepted everything with
some fatal satisfaction. Gerald was their high priest, he represented the
Lawrence appears more critical of the working class in his Lady Chatterley's Lover than in
his Women in Love. The chapter "Industrial Magnate" in Women in Love is the equivalent of
the ninth chapter in Lady Chatterly's Lover.
Lawrence criticizes the relationship between the employer and his employees. It is an
employer-employee relationship that is based on the domination on the employer's part and
the submission on the employees'. Lawrence hates the machine and his contempt is shown in
the treatment of Gerald and the miners' submissive response. In Lawrence's opinion, Gerald
could never have done what he did, if the miners had resisted their being exploited by Gerald
to his own ends. He feels a new sense of power flowing through him over all his men.
Industry has witnessed a rebirth in his hands. A new life comes into the pits, after it had been
gradually dying during his father. He managed to subjugate those who are nearest to him in
the same way as he managed to subjugate the mare and the rabbit to his will. Lawrence
believes that industry destroys the organic unity of the human being and the spontaneous self.
Lawrence, all his life, hated industrialism and machinery, and, consequently, he hated
democracy. He hated that kind of democracy that is based on mathematical principles, the
democracy of pocket, a false egalitarianism inspired by envy and hypocrisy. He substituted
his misanthropy for his father's philanthropy.
Gerald is now drifting off to his industrial activity. He becomes a man, with much substance
of money and riches. His success in the pits is an exterior shell of steel, like machines, but his
inner self is a weak soft pulp. His inner weak void pulpy part depends on Gudrun. The
emotional human part of him needs her as a child needs his mother, otherwise he would be
lost as an idiot on a moor. His uncanny material power over the miners is useless in his
emotional conflict with Gudrun. This amazingly astute and powerful man is almost an idiot
when left alone to his emotional life. The modern industrial world has only vulgarized
emotion. It is a world of iron and coal. The cruelty of iron and the smoke of coal, and the
endless greed that drove it all Gerald becomes so wealthy, yet he is afraid of death. He feels
his energy is energyless.
Gerald is the god of the machine. Yet he is not a machine. He is just a human being. He feels
that he had reached the final phase of his success by making his system perfect. He thinks
that there is no other place beyond where he arrived in and, thus, feels that he would break
down one day because life was becoming meaningless. He makes himself efficient and the
colliers respect him as they did not respect his father. But his strength is not real strength. The
world of work had left Gerald in a state of depression. He lets the machine eat up his strength
and vitality. He feels a vacuum within himself. He has been reduced by the machine to a
more intense and less human being. Strength and tenderness do not coexist in Gerald.
Industry weakens sexuality in Gerald. He represents a category of modern men who suffer
sexual failure, but this kind of failure is only a part of more general massive failure. Gerald's
But now he had succeeded-he had finally succeeded. And once or twice
lately, when he was alone in the evening and had nothing to do, he had
suddenly stood up in terror, not knowing what he was. And he went to the
mirror and looked long and closely at his own face, at his own eyes,
seeking for something. He was afraid, in mortal dry fear, but he knew not
what of. He looked at his own face. There it was, shapely and healthy, and
the same as ever, yet somehow, it was not real, it was a mask. He dare not
touch it, for fear it should prove to be only a composition mask. His eyes
were blue and keen as ever, and as firm in their look. Yet he was not sure
that they were not blue false bubbles that would burst in a moment and
leave clear annihilation. He could see the darkness in them. He was afraid
that one day he would break down and be a purely meaningless bubble
lapping round a darkness (p. 240).
Conclusion:
The theme of the dehumanizing impact of industrialization is discussed in some detail in this
article. The novel represents the twentieth-century England modern civilization. Women in
Love is full, perhaps too full, of talk about ideas particularly the idea of the fundamental
nature of modern Western civilization, which emerges as central determining assumption
from which most of the developments of the action stem. Lawrence detects certain
destructive tendencies in his society. He isolates and magnifies these tendencies, predicts
their outcome, then emerges an essentially apocalyptic vision with the particular segment of
historical time he has in hand. For Lawrence, as for great many other European artists of the
period, industry came as the greatest shock of his entire life. He loathed the negative impact
of industry, utterly disbelieved in the necessity of it. The vision of society-as-death reflects
the cycle of destruction through which Europe was passing between 1914 and 1918.