The Cambridge Introduction to George Eliot

Portada
Cambridge University Press, 2008 M04 7 - 129 páginas
As the author of The Mill on the Floss and Middlemarch, George Eliot was one of the most admired novelists of the Victorian period, and she remains a central figure in the literary canon today. She was the first woman to take on the kind of political and philosophical fiction that had previously been a male preserve, combining rigorous intellectual ideas with a sensitive understanding of human relationships and making her one of the most important writers of the nineteenth century. This innovative introduction provides students with the religious, political, scientific and cultural contexts they need to understand and appreciate her novels, stories, poetry and critical essays. Nancy Henry also traces the reception of her work to the present, surveying a range of critical and theoretical responses. Each novel is discussed in a separate section, making this the most comprehensive short introduction available to this important author.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Sección 1
14
Sección 2
16
Sección 3
19
Sección 4
30
Sección 5
41
Sección 6
77
Sección 7
101
Sección 8
104

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 35 - Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail Or knock the breast, no weakness, no contempt. Dispraise or blame, nothing but well and fair. And what may quiet us in a death so noble.
Página 31 - But the greatest thing by far is to be a master of metaphor. It is the one thing that cannot be learnt from others ; and it is also a sign of genius, since a good metaphor implies an intuitive perception of the similarity in dissimilars.
Página 15 - Family likeness has often a deep sadness in it. Nature, that great tragic dramatist, knits us together by, bone and muscle, and divides us by the subtler web of our brains ; blends yearning and repulsion ; and ties us by our heartstrings to the beings that jar us at every movement.
Página 22 - Posterity may be shot, like a bullet through a tube, by atmospheric pressure from Winchester to Newcastle: that is a fine result to have among our hopes; but the slow oldfashioned way of getting from one end of our country to the other is the better thing to have in the memory.
Página 87 - Twixt chin and hand a violin of mine, He will be glad that Stradivari lived, Made violins, and made them of the best. The masters only know whose work is good: They will choose mine, and while God gives them skill I give them instruments to play upon, God choosing me to help Him.
Página 36 - Macbeth's rhetoric about the impossibility of being many opposite things in the same moment, referred to the clumsy necessities of action and not to the subtler possibilities of feeling. We cannot speak a loyal word and be meanly silent, we cannot kill and not kill in the same moment ; but a moment is room wide enough for the loyal and mean desire, for the outlash of a murderous thought and the sharp backward stroke of repentance.

Acerca del autor (2008)

Nancy Henry is Associate Professor of English at the State University of New York at Binghamton.

Información bibliográfica