Browsing Auburn University Libraries by Subject "Middlemarch"
Now showing items 1-9 of 9
Coming to Conclusions in Middlemarch
(2023-12-06)
Article from the George Eliot Review. Digitized and hosted by the George Eliot Review Online, editor Beverley Park Rilett.
Development of Realism in Middlemarch: Reinterpreting Rosamond
(2024-12-10)
Article from the George Eliot Review. Digitized and hosted by the George Eliot Review Online, editor Beverley Park Rilett.
George Eliot, Middlemarch, and Coventry
(2023-12-06)
Article from the George Eliot Review. Digitized and hosted by the George Eliot Review Online, editor Beverley Park Rilett.
George Henry Lewes, the Real Man of Science Behind George Eliot's Fictional Pedants
(2022-04-01)
This paper demonstrates that George Eliot drew on George Henry Lewes’s actual experience as an emerging scientist in her depiction of two fictional scholars, Edward Casaubon of Middlemarch and Proteus Merman, a lesser-known ...
‘I found her in that magnificent pose’: Ekphrastic Detail and Gendered Perspectives in Middlemarch
(2025-11-18)
In his review of George Eliot's Middlemarch (1871), Henry James praised the novel for its particularly intricate and rich attention to the knottiest of social and emotional detail. He accused Eliot's attention to these ...
(Mis)Reading Characters in Middlemarch
(2024-12-10)
Article from the George Eliot Review. Digitized and hosted by the George Eliot Review Online, editor Beverley Park Rilett.
Review of BBC Radio 3's The Middlemarch Monologues, 20 March 2022
(2023-12-06)
Article from the George Eliot Review. Digitized and hosted by the George Eliot Review Online, editor Beverley Park Rilett.
Review of Coventry's The Great Middlemarch Mystery, 7-10 April 2022
(2023-12-06)
Article from the George Eliot Review. Digitized and hosted by the George Eliot Review Online, editor Beverley Park Rilett.
"What do I think of glory?": On Middlemarch by George Eliot
(2022-04-01)
"What do I think of Middlemarch? What do I think of glory?" This is the famous reply Emily Dickinson wrote to her bookish cousins in 1873 after her first reading of George Eliot’s novel. Dickinson’s sentiments were also ...
