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  1. Announces George Henry Lewes death and summarizes his life. Creator. Unknown. Source "Death of George Henry Lewes." Milwaukee Daily Sentinel, 6 Dec. 1878, p. 7.

  2. George Henry Lewes’s magnum opus, Problems of Life and Mind (1874—79), sits at a nexus between two eras in British history and in the development of psychology. His most mature contribution to the physiological psychology field, part of the “new psychology” school which emerged in the mid-to-late nineteenth century, Problems is a sprawling, multi-volume composition that combines both ...

  3. 5 de jun. de 2020 · Abstract. Like many offspring of celebrity parents, Charles Lee Lewes, the eldest son of George Henry Lewes, is known—if at all—as a footnote to the biography of his father and stepmother, George Eliot. This article demonstrates his claims to consideration on his own account, particularly in his role as George Eliot's residual legatee, while acknowledging the advantages he derived from his ...

  4. George Henry Lewes. (1817-1878), Writer. Sitter in 9 portraits. Lewes, a critic for many of the leading periodicals and briefly editor of the Fortnightly Review, also wrote works on philosophical problems as well as an acclaimed Life of Goethe. In 1854 Lewes formed a lifelong relationship with the novelist George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans), but was ...

  5. George Henry Lewes (i / ˈ l uː ɪ s /; 18 Nisan 1817 – 30 Kasım 1878), İngiliz filozof, edebiyat ve tiyatro eleştirmenidir. Aynı zamanda amatör bir fizyologdu . Amerikalı feminist Margaret Fuller , Lewes'i "esprili, Fransız, küstah bir adam" olarak nitelendirdi. [1]

  6. George Henry Lewes ( 1817 – 1878) oli englantilainen kirjailija. [1] Lewes tutustui kaksivuotisen Saksassa oleskelunsa aikana (1838–1839) Saksan yhteiskunnalliseen ja kirjalliseen elämään. Palattuaan kotimaahan hän työskenteli elämäkerrallisena novellistina, näytelmäkirjailijana ja luonnontutkijana sekä useiden aikakauskirjojen ...

  7. The scheme invented to facilitate anonymous publication of her first story led directly to Eliot’s losing control of her own income. The transfer began out of necessity: in order to obscure “George Eliot’s” iden-tity, Lewes opened a bank account in his own name and instructed Black-wood to deposit her earnings there.