George Eliot: "Adam Bede", "Mill on the Floss", "Middlemarch" (Icon Reader's Guides to Essential Criticism)
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #683967 in Books
- Published on: 2000-04-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 208 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
George Eliot's reception as a writer has been chequered from the start. Prejudice followed the reluctant revelation of her real identity as a woman, and she suffered from critical neglect at the start of the 20th century, before a post-war renaissance of interest finally established her as one of the most powerful and accomplished of British novelists. Views of Mary Ann Evans, the woman behind the pseudonym, have always been controversial: castigated during her own time for sexual impropriety with a married man, accused by male "friends" of being an overly intellectual "man-woman", rejected by 20th-century feminists for the opinions expressed in her essay "Silly Novels by Lady Novelists", she is a figure for our own times as much as for her own. Focusing on three of Eliot's most influential and widely-read "Midlands" novels, Lucie Armitt traces the effect of recent critical interpretations upon the reception and teaching of Eliot's work, as well as revisiting some of the perspectives offered by original reviewers and early critics. Class, gender and ideology all come under scrutiny, as do Eliot's central fictive themes of currency, circulation, sensuality and the voice.



