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  1. 28 de jun. de 2024 · The Mill on the Floss [Cabinet Edition, 1878; first published 1860] · George Eliot Archive. Author. George Eliot. Source. William Blackwood and Sons, 1878 (1860), Cabinet Edition. Publisher. George Eliot Archive, edited by Beverley Park Rilett, https://GeorgeEliotArchive.org. Date. 1860. Collection. Fiction by George Eliot. Citation.

  2. Hace 1 día · This chapter of The Mill on the Floss combines Ramon Fernandez’s theory of personality with Walter Benjamin’s anti-subjectivist philosophy to propose a different interpretation of George Eliot’s novel, one that engages with the critical strategy of surface reading. While a less tragic light is shed on the novel’s ending, my approach entails the reader’s recalibration of both the ...

  3. 30 de jun. de 2024 · Self-Harming Heroines in Villette, The Mill on the Floss, and Tess of the D'Urbervilles,” George Eliot Scholars, accessed June 30, 2024, https://georgeeliotscholars.org/items/show/775. Document Viewer

  4. 20 de jun. de 2024 · Novels such as Middlemarch and The Mill on the Floss reflect Eliot's complex and sometimes contradictory ideas about society, the artist, the role of women, and the interplay of science and religion. In this book Tim Dolin examines Eliot's life and work and the social and intellectual contexts in which they developed.

  5. 21 de jun. de 2024 · Houser, Tammy Amiel, ““The Ugly Duckling” and The Mill on the Floss: A Fairy-Tale Rewriting of the Bildungsroman,” George Eliot Scholars, accessed June 21, 2024, https://georgeeliotscholars.org/items/show/1123.

  6. Hace 4 días · Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, group of young British painters who banded together in 1848 in reaction against what they conceived to be the unimaginative and artificial historical painting of the Royal Academy and who purportedly sought to express a new moral seriousness and sincerity in their works.

  7. Hace 5 días · Middlemarch, novel by George Eliot, first published in eight parts in 1871–72. It is considered to be Eliot’s masterpiece. The realist work is a study of every class of society in the town of Middlemarch, but the focus is on the thwarted idealism of Dorothea Brooke and Tertius Lydgate, both of whom marry disastrously.