This essay investigates the symbolic and social meanings of dust in English-language literature, tracing its evolution from a biblical emblem of human mortality to a sign of modern collective crisis. Moving beyond the traditional image of dust as a barely visible residue, the study focuses on instances in which dust becomes an overwhelming material presence—accumulating into heaps or erupting into storms—and thereby shifts from a private, metaphysical reminder of decay into a political and environmental force. Through Dickens’s representations of Victorian London, dust appears as soot, waste, and monumental dust heaps, embodying industrial pollution, capitalist accumulation, and moral corruption, yet paradoxically also suggesting forms of redemption through recycling and reuse. Conversely, in Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, dust becomes apocalyptic and irredeemable: the Dust Bowl transforms soil into a suffocating atmosphere, triggering dispossession and mass migration. By juxtaposing Dickens and Steinbeck, the essay argues that dust functions as an archive of modernity and anticipates Anthropocene anxieties, revealing how human economies generate residues that return as catastrophe.

From Motes to Heaps of Dust: Waste, Value, and Catastrophe in Dickens and Steinbeck

Roberto Baronti Marchio
2025-01-01

Abstract

This essay investigates the symbolic and social meanings of dust in English-language literature, tracing its evolution from a biblical emblem of human mortality to a sign of modern collective crisis. Moving beyond the traditional image of dust as a barely visible residue, the study focuses on instances in which dust becomes an overwhelming material presence—accumulating into heaps or erupting into storms—and thereby shifts from a private, metaphysical reminder of decay into a political and environmental force. Through Dickens’s representations of Victorian London, dust appears as soot, waste, and monumental dust heaps, embodying industrial pollution, capitalist accumulation, and moral corruption, yet paradoxically also suggesting forms of redemption through recycling and reuse. Conversely, in Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, dust becomes apocalyptic and irredeemable: the Dust Bowl transforms soil into a suffocating atmosphere, triggering dispossession and mass migration. By juxtaposing Dickens and Steinbeck, the essay argues that dust functions as an archive of modernity and anticipates Anthropocene anxieties, revealing how human economies generate residues that return as catastrophe.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11580/122483
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