![]() ![]() ![]() Lovell’s “Separate Spheres and Extensive Circles: Sarah Savage’s The Factory Girl and the Celebration of Industry in Early Nineteenth-Century America” finds the connections between “labor, virtue, and womanhood” (1). Moore’s “Sarah Savage of Salem: A Forgotten Writer” offers biographical information regarding Savage, whereas Thomas B. Circumventing the Gatekeepers: the Path to Female Agency in The Factory Girlĭespite being hailed as “the first novel of factory life in America,” (Davidson 88) and granted the probable title of the “first Sunday school novel in America” (Moore 247), there is scant scholarship devoted to Sarah Savage’s The Factory Girl, published in 1814.
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