George Eliot filled her novels with discussions of art and references to specific paintings and sculptures. Though this element of her fiction is easy for the contemporary reader to overlook, it was well loved by her Victorian readership, and is invested with a great deal of thematic content. This thesis analyzes representations of the visual arts in Romola, Middlemarch, and Daniel Deronda, investigating the way that art becomes inseparable from Eliot’s larger moral themes of sympathy and historical consciousness
This thesis examines the connections between reading and the imagination in George Eliot’s The Mill...
By the time George Eliot began work on Scenes of Clerical Life late in 1856, she already had in mind...
This thesis is a study of George Eliot's moral philosophy as revealed in her novels. Since the nove...
This thesis examines to what extent George Eliot’s final novels, Middlemarch (1871-72) and Daniel De...
George Eliot and the Gothic Novel is the first monograph systematically to explore the relationship ...
Although the novels of George Elliott enjoyed great contemporary success, both with the reading publ...
The investment of George Eliot's narrative in characters impersonating the new epistemological conce...
Sympathy was enormously important for the Victorians. It was a central aspect of novels - where a na...
George Eliot’s novels explore the obstacles to sympathy her characters face. Chapter One discusses c...
A Thematic Study of the Characterization of Women in Three Novels by George Eliot emphasizes the dev...
The Victorians inherited powerful languages of feeling as a source of right action from the eighteen...
According to George Eliot, "the greatest benefit we owe to the artist, whether painter, poet, or nov...
Eliot's belief that reform must begin with the individual led naturally to her appreciation of trage...
This paper will compare Eliot\u27s treatment of empathy in three of her novels from different stages...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 189-200).The unorthodox theology of nineteenth century Briti...
This thesis examines the connections between reading and the imagination in George Eliot’s The Mill...
By the time George Eliot began work on Scenes of Clerical Life late in 1856, she already had in mind...
This thesis is a study of George Eliot's moral philosophy as revealed in her novels. Since the nove...
This thesis examines to what extent George Eliot’s final novels, Middlemarch (1871-72) and Daniel De...
George Eliot and the Gothic Novel is the first monograph systematically to explore the relationship ...
Although the novels of George Elliott enjoyed great contemporary success, both with the reading publ...
The investment of George Eliot's narrative in characters impersonating the new epistemological conce...
Sympathy was enormously important for the Victorians. It was a central aspect of novels - where a na...
George Eliot’s novels explore the obstacles to sympathy her characters face. Chapter One discusses c...
A Thematic Study of the Characterization of Women in Three Novels by George Eliot emphasizes the dev...
The Victorians inherited powerful languages of feeling as a source of right action from the eighteen...
According to George Eliot, "the greatest benefit we owe to the artist, whether painter, poet, or nov...
Eliot's belief that reform must begin with the individual led naturally to her appreciation of trage...
This paper will compare Eliot\u27s treatment of empathy in three of her novels from different stages...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 189-200).The unorthodox theology of nineteenth century Briti...
This thesis examines the connections between reading and the imagination in George Eliot’s The Mill...
By the time George Eliot began work on Scenes of Clerical Life late in 1856, she already had in mind...
This thesis is a study of George Eliot's moral philosophy as revealed in her novels. Since the nove...