George Eliot and Schiller: Intertextuality and cross-cultural discourse

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Routledge, Jul 22, 2016 - Literary Criticism - 202 pages

Though Friedrich Schiller enjoyed prominent literary standing and great popularity in nineteenth century literary England, his influence has been largely neglected in recent scholarship on the period.

First published in 2003, this book explores the substantial evidence of the importance of the playwright and philosopher’s thought to George Eliot’s novelistic art. It demonstrates the relationship between Schiller’s work and Eliot’s plotting of moral vision, the tensions in her work between realism and idealism, and her aesthetics. It also contends that the immense continental underpinnings of Eliot’s writing should lead us to resituate her beyond national boundaries, and view her as a major European, as well as English, writer.

This book will be of interest to those studying 19th Century English and European literature.

 

Contents

1 Intertextuality and CrossCultural Discourse
1
Contexts
23
Adam Bede and Schillers Wilhelm Tell
49
4 Passionate Morality and The Mill on the Floss
79
Romola
108
6 Narrative Ambivalence in Middlemarch and Felix Holt the Radical
127
7 The Aesthetics of Sympathy
145
Bibliography
171
Schillers Works
184
Index
185
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Guth, Deborah

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