This study argues that Jewish Mysticism influenced all Eliot's novels and not just her Jewish novel, "Daniel Deronda", and leaves the reader with a very different George Eliot from that assumed by most previous criticism. Though previous studies have attempted to qualify the still dominant view that George Eliot is firmly as part of the realistic tradition, this study goes further by demonstrating that a cohesive mythic structure with its basis in Jewish mysticism is identifiable in her fiction. Providing helpful background and factual information about the Golem and other aspects of Kabbalah, this work should appeal to anyone interested in the myth of the Golem, the re-writing of Victorian culture from a Judaic perspective, and George Elio...
This study aims to explore George Eliot's early fiction in terms of her response to the two competin...
When Daniel Deronda was first published in 1876 George Eliot was disappointed that readers tended to...
This essay reads George Eliot\u27s Daniel Deronda as a self-conscious revision of the Christian scri...
This study argues that Jewish Mysticism influenced all Eliot's novels and not just her Jewish novel,...
This thesis is an examination of George Eliot's interest in Judaism and the use to which she puts he...
Saleel Nurbhai and K. M. Newton break new ground with this consideration of George Eliot\u27s exploi...
The thesis will examine the influence of Biblical literature on some of the novels of George Eliot. ...
A criticism of George Eliot\u27s Daniel Deronda, from Henry James onwards, is that it is a novel of ...
The writer proposes to determine those predominant theories that are reflected in George Eliot\u27s ...
Readers of Daniel Deronda have long noted the tension in the novel between the so-called Jewish an...
This study examines two central themes in Daniel Deronda, both the 1876 novel by George Eliot and th...
George Eliot, the first English novelist to move in the vanguard of the thought and learning of her ...
This dissertation seeks to articulate the extent to which George Eliot engages in an active dialogue...
George Eliot and the Gothic Novel is the first monograph systematically to explore the relationship ...
Many scholars have discussed Judaism and the ethics of George Eliot in Daniel Deronda, but few have ...
This study aims to explore George Eliot's early fiction in terms of her response to the two competin...
When Daniel Deronda was first published in 1876 George Eliot was disappointed that readers tended to...
This essay reads George Eliot\u27s Daniel Deronda as a self-conscious revision of the Christian scri...
This study argues that Jewish Mysticism influenced all Eliot's novels and not just her Jewish novel,...
This thesis is an examination of George Eliot's interest in Judaism and the use to which she puts he...
Saleel Nurbhai and K. M. Newton break new ground with this consideration of George Eliot\u27s exploi...
The thesis will examine the influence of Biblical literature on some of the novels of George Eliot. ...
A criticism of George Eliot\u27s Daniel Deronda, from Henry James onwards, is that it is a novel of ...
The writer proposes to determine those predominant theories that are reflected in George Eliot\u27s ...
Readers of Daniel Deronda have long noted the tension in the novel between the so-called Jewish an...
This study examines two central themes in Daniel Deronda, both the 1876 novel by George Eliot and th...
George Eliot, the first English novelist to move in the vanguard of the thought and learning of her ...
This dissertation seeks to articulate the extent to which George Eliot engages in an active dialogue...
George Eliot and the Gothic Novel is the first monograph systematically to explore the relationship ...
Many scholars have discussed Judaism and the ethics of George Eliot in Daniel Deronda, but few have ...
This study aims to explore George Eliot's early fiction in terms of her response to the two competin...
When Daniel Deronda was first published in 1876 George Eliot was disappointed that readers tended to...
This essay reads George Eliot\u27s Daniel Deronda as a self-conscious revision of the Christian scri...