4.3 Article

Elizabeth Gaskell: An overlooked political economist and proto theorist in the field of industrial relations

Journal

GENDER WORK AND ORGANIZATION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gwao.13089

Keywords

audience theory; Elizabeth Gaskell; feminist polemics; industrial relations; political economy

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This polemical essay argues that Victorian novelist Elizabeth Gaskell is an overlooked, early political economist, using feminist critical historiography to reevaluate her work. The paper challenges the prevailing truth claims about pluralistic forms of employee engagement and advocates for further development in the field. It also highlights Gaskell's contributions to the understanding of class and wealth inequalities, which have been underappreciated in industrial relations scholarship. The essay presents a unique feminist perspective on Gaskell and emphasizes the importance of recognizing her as an early political economist.
This polemical essay argues that Victorian novelist Elizabeth Gaskell, and her novels North and South, and Mary Barton, portray her as an overlooked, early political economist. The objective of the paper is three-fold: (1) to dismantle taken-for-granted truth claims that Alan Fox is the preeminent thinker on pluralistic forms of employee engagement (2) encourage further development and enlargement of the field and what constitutes its history, and (3) to argue for the recognition of Elizabeth Gaskell as an early political economist. Guiding this exploration is the question: How do we also make sense of Fox's privileged situatedness in scholarship and the absence of potential early theorists like Gaskell? The paper adopts a feminist reading and polemical writing to engage in feminist critical historiography. The author draws on audience theory to help readers reorient themselves to Gaskell and to help see her as an overlooked political economist. Feminism is conceptually presented as ontology, epistemology, method, and style of writing. Despite the ongoing credit Alan Fox receives as first theorizing the frames of reference and pluralistic forms of engagement starting in the 1960s, Elizabeth Gaskell was contemplating and critiquing the employment relationship starting in the 1850s. She not only provided a rich historical understanding of the inequalities of class and wealth, but her ideas and insights remain unacknowledged in industrial relations scholarship. The paper offers a unique feminist perspective on Elizabeth Gaskell and makes the case that she is neglected early political economist. Further, the paper makes a link between the world of Victorian era fiction as historical understanding of early capitalist society and demonstrates how ideas are taken up by the field in unconscious and unjust ways.

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