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Old 08-02-2019, 11:00 AM   #17
Bookworm_Girl
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Join Date: Aug 2010
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I nominate Shirley by Charlotte Brontė. It is about a village in the Napoleonic era which has been introduced to machinery and chronicles its effects on the social order.

From Goodreads:
Quote:
Following the tremendous popular success of Jane Eyre, which earned her lifelong notoriety as a moral revolutionary, Charlotte Brontė vowed to write a sweeping social chronicle that focused on "something real and unromantic as Monday morning." Set in the industrializing England of the Napoleonic wars and Luddite revolts of 1811-12, Shirley (1849) is the story of two contrasting heroines. One is the shy Caroline Helstone, who is trapped in the oppressive atmosphere of a Yorkshire rectory and whose bare life symbolizes the plight of single women in the nineteenth century. The other is the vivacious Shirley Keeldar, who inherits a local estate and whose wealth liberates her from convention.
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