It is a curious fact that when a writer has attained to a certain eminence, we English cease to bother ourselves about him. There he is, recognised, accepted, labelled. I recalled these words, from the conversation of Katherine Mansfield in 1920, and recorded in her journal, when I opened the World\u27s Classics paperback edition of Middlemarch edited by David Carron, Professor of English literature at the University of Lancaster. Katherine Mansfield\u27s opinion may have been well-grounded in 1920, but it would certainly not be valid today, especially in relation to George Eliot and her work. A glance at the Select Bibliography shows that in recent years many people have \u27bothered\u27 themselves about her. It will be seen that a signif...
Advanced undergraduate or graduate students, as well as general readers who are quite familiar with ...
As his sub-title indicates, J. Hillis Miller is returning in his latest book to the study of George ...
Towards the climax of Felix Holt Esther Lyon moves centre stage. Mist around her own history and tha...
It is a curious fact that when a writer has attained to a certain eminence, we English cease to both...
This set of eight original essays engages afresh with a novel that many readers might claim to know ...
I read Middlemarch for the first time in the Everyman\u27s Library edition of 1930, a trim book in t...
This book is a reprint of the 1967 edition published by the Athlone Press, one of \u2756 classic wor...
We welcome the Clarendon edition of George Eliot’s Middlemarch, which is generally considered to be ...
The recent appearance of a Dutch translation of Middlemarch, in a prestigious series of classics by ...
This new \u27Reader\u27s Guide\u27 successfully complements two preceding works that were written fo...
Both books under review appear in series that aim to give new currency to texts and authors by the p...
This edition of George Eliot\u27s first fiction reproduces the text of the much acclaimed Clarendon ...
In \u27Silly Novels by Lady Novelists Gaskell and Harriet Martineau were the only living novelists ...
Many publishers run series of \u27introductions\u27 to English literature - handy roll-calls of the ...
Readers of Middlemarch, it is a pleasure to report, are now spoil for choice. Joining an already sat...
Advanced undergraduate or graduate students, as well as general readers who are quite familiar with ...
As his sub-title indicates, J. Hillis Miller is returning in his latest book to the study of George ...
Towards the climax of Felix Holt Esther Lyon moves centre stage. Mist around her own history and tha...
It is a curious fact that when a writer has attained to a certain eminence, we English cease to both...
This set of eight original essays engages afresh with a novel that many readers might claim to know ...
I read Middlemarch for the first time in the Everyman\u27s Library edition of 1930, a trim book in t...
This book is a reprint of the 1967 edition published by the Athlone Press, one of \u2756 classic wor...
We welcome the Clarendon edition of George Eliot’s Middlemarch, which is generally considered to be ...
The recent appearance of a Dutch translation of Middlemarch, in a prestigious series of classics by ...
This new \u27Reader\u27s Guide\u27 successfully complements two preceding works that were written fo...
Both books under review appear in series that aim to give new currency to texts and authors by the p...
This edition of George Eliot\u27s first fiction reproduces the text of the much acclaimed Clarendon ...
In \u27Silly Novels by Lady Novelists Gaskell and Harriet Martineau were the only living novelists ...
Many publishers run series of \u27introductions\u27 to English literature - handy roll-calls of the ...
Readers of Middlemarch, it is a pleasure to report, are now spoil for choice. Joining an already sat...
Advanced undergraduate or graduate students, as well as general readers who are quite familiar with ...
As his sub-title indicates, J. Hillis Miller is returning in his latest book to the study of George ...
Towards the climax of Felix Holt Esther Lyon moves centre stage. Mist around her own history and tha...