Ethical Vision of George Eliot

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A01=Thomas Albrecht
Author_Thomas Albrecht
Bird's Eye
Bird’s Eye
Burlesque Caricatures
Category=DS
Category=DSA
Category=DSB
Category=DSBF
cosmopolitanism in novels
Daniel Deronda
Defective Mirror
Difference Imperative
Dorothea's Experience
Dorothea’s Experience
Effective Negation
Eliot's Conception
Eliot's essays
Eliot's fiction
Eliot's Narrator
Eliot's Realism
Eliot’s Conception
Eliot’s Narrator
Eliot’s Realism
Empathetic Encounters
empathy and alterity theory
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethical ideas
ethical responsibility in fiction
German Life
human communion
Human Suffering
Jewish Separateness
Lifted Veil
literary realism studies
Mirror Motif
Modern Hep
Moral Currency
narrative ethics analysis
nineteenth-century literature
Partial Cosmopolitanism
Parting Scene
Pier Glass
Riverbank Scene
Saint Theresas
Sir James Chettam
Theophrastus's Text
Theophrastus’s Text
Victorian moral philosophy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032175683
  • Weight: 322g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Ethical Vision of George Eliot is one of the first monographs devoted entirely to the ethical thought of George Eliot, a profoundly significant, influential figure not only in nineteenth-century English and European literature, nineteenth-century women’s writing, the history of the novel, and Victorian intellectual culture, but also in the field of literary ethics. Ethics are a predominant theme in Eliot’s fictional and non-fictional writings. Her ethical insights and ideas are a defining element of her greatness as an artist and novelist.

Through meticulous close readings of Eliot’s fiction, essays, and letters, The Ethical Vision of George Eliot presents an original, complex definition of her ethical vision as she developed it over the course of her career. It examines major novels like Adam Bede, Middlemarch, and Daniel Deronda; many of Eliot’s most significant essays; and devotes two entire chapters to Eliot’s final book Impressions of Theophrastus Such, an idiosyncratic collection of character sketches that Eliot scholars have heretofore generally overlooked or ignored.

The Ethical Vision of George Eliot demonstrates that Eliot defined her ethical vision alternately in terms of revealing and strengthening a fundamental human communion that links us to other persons, however different and remote from ourselves; and in terms of recognizing and respecting the otherness of other persons, and of the universe more generally, from ourselves. Over the course of her career, Eliot increasingly transitions from the former towards the latter imperative, but she also considerably complicates her conception of otherness, and of what it means to be ethically responsible to it.

Thomas Albrecht is an Associate Professor of English at Tulane University in New Orleans, where he teaches nineteenth-century British and European literature, Comparative Literature, and literary theory and criticism. He is the author of The Medusa Effect: Representation and Epistemology in Victorian Aesthetics (2009) and of several journal and book chapter articles on George Eliot’s ethics, as well as the editor of Selected Writings by Sarah Kofman (2007).

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