Present-day critics of George Eliot have glanced at, discussed, but given no undue significance to the medieval context in her work. Gillian Beer for instance lists mythological systems woven into Eliot's work which include troubadour romance, courtly love, hagiography and martyrology, and suggests that exploring the context of these systems will enhance our reading of Eliot's texts. Earlier, Robert Preyer discussed the 'failure' of Daniel Deronda as attributable to the 'difficulty in handling ideas of this sort in works of realistic fiction'. However, Eliot uses medieval discourses such as romance and religious allegory to modify areas in an apparently realistic text so that conflict may be expressed in manageable terms. Orderly conflict p...
George Eliot’s complex art of character portrayal has drawn wide-applause. Critics have analyzed her...
Before George Eliot, penname of Mary Ann Evans, wrote the novels that brought her an enduring reputa...
This new \u27Reader\u27s Guide\u27 successfully complements two preceding works that were written fo...
George Eliot and the Discourses of Medievalism argues that Eliot abandons realism in her last two no...
Jerome Beaty should have given this lecture: 1 I have spoken and written in celebration of his schol...
"In Middlemarch, George Eliot draws a character passionately absorbed by abstruse allusion and obscu...
This thesis examines to what extent George Eliot’s final novels, Middlemarch (1871-72) and Daniel De...
Since its first publication in 1871-2, George Eliot's Middlemarch, has been studied and re-studied b...
This thesis is a study of George Eliot's moral philosophy as revealed in her novels. Since the nove...
Saint Theresa\u27s life of achievement is offered as a contrast to the heroine of Middlemarch, Dorot...
This set of eight original essays engages afresh with a novel that many readers might claim to know ...
Through the novel Middlemarch, George Eliot fulfills the intention of her subtitle and uses sociolog...
It is a curious fact that when a writer has attained to a certain eminence, we English cease to both...
In the consideration of most critics and scholars. Middlemarch by George Eliot is a catalog of the V...
There has been no lack of awareness in modern criticism of the complexities and surprises of George ...
George Eliot’s complex art of character portrayal has drawn wide-applause. Critics have analyzed her...
Before George Eliot, penname of Mary Ann Evans, wrote the novels that brought her an enduring reputa...
This new \u27Reader\u27s Guide\u27 successfully complements two preceding works that were written fo...
George Eliot and the Discourses of Medievalism argues that Eliot abandons realism in her last two no...
Jerome Beaty should have given this lecture: 1 I have spoken and written in celebration of his schol...
"In Middlemarch, George Eliot draws a character passionately absorbed by abstruse allusion and obscu...
This thesis examines to what extent George Eliot’s final novels, Middlemarch (1871-72) and Daniel De...
Since its first publication in 1871-2, George Eliot's Middlemarch, has been studied and re-studied b...
This thesis is a study of George Eliot's moral philosophy as revealed in her novels. Since the nove...
Saint Theresa\u27s life of achievement is offered as a contrast to the heroine of Middlemarch, Dorot...
This set of eight original essays engages afresh with a novel that many readers might claim to know ...
Through the novel Middlemarch, George Eliot fulfills the intention of her subtitle and uses sociolog...
It is a curious fact that when a writer has attained to a certain eminence, we English cease to both...
In the consideration of most critics and scholars. Middlemarch by George Eliot is a catalog of the V...
There has been no lack of awareness in modern criticism of the complexities and surprises of George ...
George Eliot’s complex art of character portrayal has drawn wide-applause. Critics have analyzed her...
Before George Eliot, penname of Mary Ann Evans, wrote the novels that brought her an enduring reputa...
This new \u27Reader\u27s Guide\u27 successfully complements two preceding works that were written fo...