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  1. Workers in the Dawn is a novel by George Gissing, which was originally published in three volumes in 1880. It was the first of Gissing's published novels, although he had been working on another prior to this. The work focuses on the unhappy marriage of Arthur Golding, a rising artist from a poor background, and Carrie Mitchell, a ...

    • George Gissing
    • 1880
  2. 7 janv. 2010 · Workers in the Dawn (1880) was the first published novel from the pen of George Gissing, one of the nineteenth century’s most original writers. It tells the story of Arthur Golding, a young boy who finds himself orphaned after his dissolute father dies in the squalor of a London slum.

  3. 2 Workers in the Dawn (Remington, juin 1880) est l’œuvre dun jeune homme de 22 ans, artiste dans l’âme, intellectuel brillant dont les passions et les illusions résistent mal au vécu sordide qui est le sien depuis son expulsion de Owens College (Manchester).

    • Christine Huguet
    • 2010
  4. 20 mai 2012 · When he is eight years old Arthur Golding watches his gifted but dissolute father die in poverty and squalor. Aided by a series of brilliantly-drawn characters, Arthur escapes slum life, gains an education, falls in love, and looks set to launch his career in London as an artist.

    • (36)
    • Paperback
  5. In this, his first published novel, George Gissing establishes the hallmarks of his life-long literary obsession with class, money and sex. Against the turbulent background of London in the late nineteenth century he explores the overwhelming obstacles that face men of education, intelligence and talent, who strive to escape from the artisan class into which they were born.

  6. Buy Workers in the Dawn by George Gissing, Pierre Coustillas from Amazon's Fiction Books Store. Everyday low prices on a huge range of new releases and classic fiction.

    • George Gissing
  7. Workers in the Dawn” Subjects Of Study: Charles Dickens. Ask the Chatbot a Question. George Gissing (born November 22, 1857, Wakefield, Yorkshire, England—died December 28, 1903, Saint-Jean-de-Luz, France) was an English novelist, noted for the unflinching realism of his novels about the lower middle class.

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