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George Eliot

The Last Victorian

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When radical journalist Marian Evans moved in with her lover, Victorian society ostracized her, leaving her socially exiled. At 37, she found the courage to write the novels that had long haunted her imagination, achieving fame and acceptance as George Eliot, even garnering attention from Queen Victoria. However, the approval she craved most came from her brother, Isaac Evans, who spent over twenty years refusing to acknowledge her unconventional life, which shattered his image of respectability. This biography delves into the impact of Marian's troubled family background on her rejection of the lies and silences prevalent in Victorian England. Despite her radicalism, Marian sought the stability and continuity of her youth, often revisiting the agricultural communities in her novels. In these settings, she discovered emotional warmth absent in the secular, scientific world her intellectual peers championed. This psychological exploration reveals George Eliot as a profound chronicler of Victorian society, balancing cosmopolitan skepticism with a deep understanding of the emotional ties and memories that connected her readers to their past.

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George Eliot, Kathryn Hughes

Langue
Année de publication
1998,
État du livre
Abîmé
Prix
7,66 €

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