The Quest for Anonymity: The Novels of George EliotIn a new treatment of Eliot's booklength fiction, Alley argues that from the very moment she adopted a male pseudonym through to the major epic and tragic novels of her later life, the transcendence of fame was her major consideration. Focusing on one novel in each chapter, the study shows how the plights of Eliot's heroines and heroes do not end in frustration but in an affirmation of anonymous achievement, "the growing good of the world." For Eliot, heroism emerges through disclosure, rather than grandly executed action, and since the revelation requires discerning effort on the part of those watching, both observer and observed are celebrated. |
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Page 40
... complex response toward them — not out of some strictly moral devotion to " realism ” but more out of a desire to ... complex beauty - complex because the former impression is united into composition with the newer one . Later on , the ...
... complex response toward them — not out of some strictly moral devotion to " realism ” but more out of a desire to ... complex beauty - complex because the former impression is united into composition with the newer one . Later on , the ...
Page 41
... complex form of art . If mimesis is a particular form of visualization , then we are in a world much more flexible than one of journalistic veracity . The narrator , who is an unabashed artistic construction " himself , " turns from ...
... complex form of art . If mimesis is a particular form of visualization , then we are in a world much more flexible than one of journalistic veracity . The narrator , who is an unabashed artistic construction " himself , " turns from ...
Page 98
... complex . Both A Room of One's Own and Eliot's essays suggest a fear of lack of particularity and vividness such as a one - gendered mission might create the sort of fear Eliot mentioned when she wrote to Harrison of her concern that ...
... complex . Both A Room of One's Own and Eliot's essays suggest a fear of lack of particularity and vividness such as a one - gendered mission might create the sort of fear Eliot mentioned when she wrote to Harrison of her concern that ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Scenes of Clerical Life and the Art of Indirect | 27 |
Heroic Perception in Adam Bede | 40 |
Copyright | |
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achieve acknowledge action Adam Adam Bede Aeschylus allusion anonymous heroism apparent artist balance becomes begins better called Casaubon chapter character clear close comes complete context continuity create critics Daniel Deronda death develop Dorothea earlier early effect Esther example experience fact father feeling Felix female fiction final Floss frequently George Eliot given gives Greek tragedy growing Gwendolen hand hero heroic human ideal imagination important Irwine later learned light living look Lydgate Maggie male means memory Middlemarch Mill mind moral narrative narrator nature never novel offers once past perceive perhaps present Press reader reading represents role Romola scene seems seen sense serves shows Silas Silas Marner soul speaks spirit story suffering suggest sympathy things thought tion tragedy true turn University vision voice whole woman writes