Particularities: Readings in George Eliot |
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Page 19
... social pattern of the novel , George Eliot's dramatization of the conflict between life - values and death - values - Eros and Thanatos - will appear to have a good deal in common with Lady Chatterley's Lover . Certain Iliads , as ...
... social pattern of the novel , George Eliot's dramatization of the conflict between life - values and death - values - Eros and Thanatos - will appear to have a good deal in common with Lady Chatterley's Lover . Certain Iliads , as ...
Page 102
... social links between its passionate moment and lower forms or lesser variants , it is also unaware of the thickly peopled world . In this inveterately social novel , we are perpetually reminded of the community . George Eliot insists3 ...
... social links between its passionate moment and lower forms or lesser variants , it is also unaware of the thickly peopled world . In this inveterately social novel , we are perpetually reminded of the community . George Eliot insists3 ...
Page 116
... social imagination , but George Eliot seems to bring her own social imagination into unusually full play , in order most calmly to turn its direction . What had seemed of central interest was not , after all , the point of the scene ...
... social imagination , but George Eliot seems to bring her own social imagination into unusually full play , in order most calmly to turn its direction . What had seemed of central interest was not , after all , the point of the scene ...
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Common terms and phrases
action acts Adam affective analysis appearance appropriate artist become beginning bring Casaubon Chapter character close comes complete concerned consciousness continuity creates crisis criticism Daniel dark death Deronda detail Dorothea dream emotional environment essays example expected experience explicit expressive fantasy feeling fiction Floss fully George Eliot give going hand human imagery imagination implications important individual instance interest kind Ladislaw later less letter light living look Lydgate Maggie marriage masculine meaning Middlemarch Mill mind moral move movement narrative narrator nature never novel novelist objects observes particular passion past perhaps possible present psychological question reader reading relation relationship response reticence ritual scene seems sense sexual shape shows social speak story strong suggest symbol takes tells things thought truth turn vision voice whole writing