In the radio dramatization of a novel, it is left to the actors to persuade us that they are the individuals whose roles they undertake, but it remains the responsibility of the scriptwriter to select and organize those roles with respect for the overall vision of the originating artist. How well, then, did Radio Four\u27s recent five-episode dramatization of The Mill on the Floss serve George Eliot? It is axiomatic that, without Maggie Tulliver, there would be no Mill on the Floss; but, in this most autobiographical of George Eliot\u27s novels, it is not Maggie who is omnipresent, but the narrator. Though Maggie is the protagonist, it is the narrator\u27s spirit that pervades; the narrator\u27s voice that compels - that guides us into the ...
Towards the climax of Felix Holt Esther Lyon moves centre stage. Mist around her own history and tha...
George Eliot\u27s novels have never been received in France with great enthusiasm. Translatiom have ...
This collection of essays on two of George Eliot\u27s most popular novels adds to the growing number...
In the radio dramatization of a novel, it is left to the actors to persuade us that they are the ind...
It is a breathtaking evening at the Fortune Theatre, in the sense that we come to share the actress\...
In this lamentably impoverished adaptation by Hugh Stoddart (directed by Graham Theakston), a charac...
By late 1859, when she had almost finished writing The Mill on the Floss, George Eliot was still uns...
During this writer\u27s year of pursuit of the Master of Arts degree in English, the critical catech...
“George Eliot seems to be fashionable at the moment. I gather that Silas Marner is planned for tele...
The 2010 London conference on The Mill on the Floss was designedly conscious of its distance in time...
In his review of The Mill on the Floss on 19 May 1860 for The Times, E. S. Dallas began by arguing t...
The view that Eliot presented her female characters with only very limited possibilities for self-re...
Unheralded in the Radio Times and elsewhere, Silas Mamer, dramatized by Richard Cameron, was broadca...
The author and narrator of a novel must each have a voice; a strong voice that the reader can hear ...
\u27The Mill on the Floss is everyone\u27s favourite novel\u27 was the provocative declaration that ...
Towards the climax of Felix Holt Esther Lyon moves centre stage. Mist around her own history and tha...
George Eliot\u27s novels have never been received in France with great enthusiasm. Translatiom have ...
This collection of essays on two of George Eliot\u27s most popular novels adds to the growing number...
In the radio dramatization of a novel, it is left to the actors to persuade us that they are the ind...
It is a breathtaking evening at the Fortune Theatre, in the sense that we come to share the actress\...
In this lamentably impoverished adaptation by Hugh Stoddart (directed by Graham Theakston), a charac...
By late 1859, when she had almost finished writing The Mill on the Floss, George Eliot was still uns...
During this writer\u27s year of pursuit of the Master of Arts degree in English, the critical catech...
“George Eliot seems to be fashionable at the moment. I gather that Silas Marner is planned for tele...
The 2010 London conference on The Mill on the Floss was designedly conscious of its distance in time...
In his review of The Mill on the Floss on 19 May 1860 for The Times, E. S. Dallas began by arguing t...
The view that Eliot presented her female characters with only very limited possibilities for self-re...
Unheralded in the Radio Times and elsewhere, Silas Mamer, dramatized by Richard Cameron, was broadca...
The author and narrator of a novel must each have a voice; a strong voice that the reader can hear ...
\u27The Mill on the Floss is everyone\u27s favourite novel\u27 was the provocative declaration that ...
Towards the climax of Felix Holt Esther Lyon moves centre stage. Mist around her own history and tha...
George Eliot\u27s novels have never been received in France with great enthusiasm. Translatiom have ...
This collection of essays on two of George Eliot\u27s most popular novels adds to the growing number...