The general editors of this series, Eva Figes and Adele King, explain that there is a need for their series of feminist readings because much of the criticism on selected women writers by male critics is usually unfair, false or simplistic (vii). Kristin Brady very quickly and effectively proves their point in the first chapter of George Eliot by referring to many influential nineteenth- and twentieth-century male critics who were often more preoccupied with Eliot\u27s appearance or what they judged to be her suspect femininity than with a straightforward consideration of her artistic achievements. Among such critics, says Brady, Gordon S. Haight was a prominent, albeit unwitting, offender. Brady rounds on Haight for his persistent use of t...
A mid-nineteenth century feminist anxious to enlist the support of the illustrious George Eliot in h...
As Susan Rowland Tush notes, recent critics have given considerable attention (often rather harshly)...
This lively book is part of a new Cambridge University Press series already more than thirty titles ...
The general editors of this series, Eva Figes and Adele King, explain that there is a need for their...
The word \u27poetess\u27 is contentious. For some it rankles, because the diminution of \u27poet\u27...
I feel that one should draw attention to the fact that in 1886 an American woman established certain...
This luminous new work - dedicated to \u27the millions of women deprived of life, liberty, and the p...
This is a modest book, edited by three people who are so modest that they reveal nothing at all abou...
In the epilogue to her life of George Eliot Elsemarie Maletzke pays tribute to the work of Gordon S....
When I first heard that Virago were to pubIish a book about George Eliot (the author sought my help ...
Many publishers run series of \u27introductions\u27 to English literature - handy roll-calls of the ...
Walter Houghton made duality, and especially opposites, the keystone of his analysis of the Victoria...
In an essay published in the Westminster Review in 1856, George Eliot delivered a scathing indictmen...
Barbara Hardy has been thinking and writing about George Eliot for about fifty years, always in ways...
This detailed study is in the series Reading Women Writing, and it presupposes not only a familiarit...
A mid-nineteenth century feminist anxious to enlist the support of the illustrious George Eliot in h...
As Susan Rowland Tush notes, recent critics have given considerable attention (often rather harshly)...
This lively book is part of a new Cambridge University Press series already more than thirty titles ...
The general editors of this series, Eva Figes and Adele King, explain that there is a need for their...
The word \u27poetess\u27 is contentious. For some it rankles, because the diminution of \u27poet\u27...
I feel that one should draw attention to the fact that in 1886 an American woman established certain...
This luminous new work - dedicated to \u27the millions of women deprived of life, liberty, and the p...
This is a modest book, edited by three people who are so modest that they reveal nothing at all abou...
In the epilogue to her life of George Eliot Elsemarie Maletzke pays tribute to the work of Gordon S....
When I first heard that Virago were to pubIish a book about George Eliot (the author sought my help ...
Many publishers run series of \u27introductions\u27 to English literature - handy roll-calls of the ...
Walter Houghton made duality, and especially opposites, the keystone of his analysis of the Victoria...
In an essay published in the Westminster Review in 1856, George Eliot delivered a scathing indictmen...
Barbara Hardy has been thinking and writing about George Eliot for about fifty years, always in ways...
This detailed study is in the series Reading Women Writing, and it presupposes not only a familiarit...
A mid-nineteenth century feminist anxious to enlist the support of the illustrious George Eliot in h...
As Susan Rowland Tush notes, recent critics have given considerable attention (often rather harshly)...
This lively book is part of a new Cambridge University Press series already more than thirty titles ...