This paper advances a structural account of environment as a regime operating longitudinally upon the human subject. Rather than treating hardship, aging, or emotional strain as universally comparable experiences, it examines how sustained regimes of material, temporal, and cognitive constraint inscribe themselves into human form over time. Drawing on realist literature of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries—George Gissing, Leo Tolstoy, Jack London, and George Orwell—the analysis traces how duration, repetition, and uninterrupted responsibility reshape cognition, bodily presence, and expressive capacity independently of moral character or psychological disposition. The study demonstrates that environmental pressure acts cumulatively rather than episodically, first narrowing imaginative margin and later consolidating into visible, often irreversible, bodily and cognitive form. By isolating regime rather than event, the paper challenges claims of experiential universality and argues that lives lived under structurally unequal conditions are analytically non-equivalent, even when biographical markers appear comparable.
Darya Spiridonov (Thu,) studied this question.