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  1. 5 de out. de 2019 · In Love with George Eliot is a glorious debut novel which tells the compelling story of England’s greatest woman novelist as you’ve never read it before. Marian Evans is a scandalous figure, living in sin with a married man, George Henry Lewes. She has shocked polite society, and women rarely deign to visit her.

  2. George Eliot's attitude to the Woman Question was complex. Her great admiration for great women, especially when they were writers, is made apparent in her essay, "Margaret Fuller and Mary Wollstonecraft" (2.1456–61). Yet in this essay and also in "Silly Novels by Lady Novelists" (2.1461–69), Eliot is sharply critical of certain kinds of women.

  3. George Eliot (2016). “Felix Holt, The Radical: Top Novelist Focus”, p.132, 谷月社. 88 Copy quote. Wear a smile and have friends; wear a scowl and have wrinkles. George Eliot. Friendship, Happiness, Smile. 52 Copy quote. Ignorance gives one a large range of probabilities. George Eliot.

  4. 25 de jan. de 2019 · 1 Introduction: George Eliot and the Art of Realism; 2 A Woman of Many Names; 3 Marian Evans’s Journalism; 4 George Eliot and Her Publishers; 5 The Early Novels; 6 The Later Novels; 7 George Eliot and Money; 8 George Eliot and Gender; 9 George Eliot and Politics; 10 George Eliot and Science; 11 George Eliot and Religion; 12 George Eliot and ...

  5. Eliot died at their home on December 22, 1880. Cross arranged and edited a three-volume work on her life titled George Eliot’s Life as Related in Her Letters and Journals (1884).This has been the main source for succeeding biographies. (1819–80). One of England’s foremost novelists of the Victorian Age was Mary Ann (or Marian) Evans, who ...

  6. Romola is the fi rst of Eliot’s novels to face directly, in form and subject, the crisis of realism . On her fi rst attempt at resistance, Romola is turned back by her encounter with Savonarola. Even at the end, Romola can only drift – not run – away, and she can redeem herself by becoming a savior in another.

  7. After The Mill on the Floss, the gender-specific references stopped, and in time it became well-known that the author of the George Eliot novels was a woman. But most readers and reviewers of the Scenes and Adam Bede were not as perceptive as Dickens, who immediately guessed from internal evidence that their author was a woman.