The economic and social transformations brought about by industrialisation, colonialism, and capitalism is reflected in English fiction, which provides a potent portrayal of trade, migration, and labour. Authors depict how the growth of commerce transforms societies and profoundly impacts people's lives, especially those of migrants and labourers. In English fiction, commerce is frequently depicted as exploitative and dehumanising. Industrial capitalism ignores workers' moral and emotional demands in Hard Times by Charles Dickens, turning them into mere machines of production. A profit-driven system that puts wealth ahead of human dignity is represented by factories and commercial establishments. In a similar vein, George Orwell's Burmese Days reveals how colonial trade perpetuates racial injustice and moral degeneration in colonised communities while upholding imperial power. Economic necessity and migration are intimately related. In quest of work and survival, characters move from villages to cities or from colonies to major metropolis. Migrants in V.S. Naipaul's fiction face identity crises, alienation, and cultural displacement. Thus, migration becomes a trip influenced by commercial forces on both a physical and psychological level. Workers are seen as exploited and marginalised. The plight of migrant workers under colonial economic systems is depicted eloquently in Mulk Raj Anand'sCoolie. The human cost of economic development is highlighted by the difficult working conditions, poverty, and social prejudice that workers face. In conclusion, a few English fictions depict work, migration, and business as interrelated factors influencing contemporary society. These novels highlight literature's function as a voice of social consciousness and critically reveal economic inequality, reminding readers that material advancement frequently comes at the price of human values.
Santosh P.Sutar (Sun,) studied this question.
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