George Eliot
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- My Favorite Novel: Middlemarch, by George Eliot, a Novel for Grown Up PeopleVirginia Woolf called Middlemarch by George Eliot one of the few English novels written for grown up people. It studies the marriages of its two main characters from courtship through a few years, looking at the effects of character upon events.
- Adam Bede, by George EliotGeorge Eliot's brand of realism was polarizing and complex. This paper examines the criticisms of her work and whether they were fair or unfair.
- George Eliot's the Lifted Veil: an Autobiographical ResponseThe cause and effect relationship of his ability, his arrogance and his misery sends a powerful message about how we should come to accept our own abilities or such things that make us matter.
- The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot: a Tale of Feminine RevengeThis paper analyzes George Eliot's character, Maggie, in The Mill on the Floss and suggests that the story is, on one level, a story of revenge.
- Examining Gender Roles in George Eliot's Adam BedeThough Dinah begins with the public role of a female preacher, by the end of the novel, she has been transformed into a very traditional role as a wife and mother.
- George Eliot's Adam Bede - Hetty Sorrel's Journey from Hope to DespairGeorge Eliot's first novel contains a far more horrendous crime then Silas Marner
Original Lesson Plans for the Book Silas Marner, by George EliotUse these free, unique Silas Marner lesson plans to enhance your student's study of the classic novel.- Bully Worship in George Eliot's The Mill on the FlossSocial networks have led to an increase in bullies, but they have always been around. In fact, sometimes the so-called heroes of classic books on school reading lists are bullies.
- Dying of Bordeom: the Tragic Life of Carolyn G. HeilbrunCarolyn Heilbrun committed suicide because she chose safety over her creativity.
21 Quotes on Family...because inevitably, we become what we THINK and our world is a reflection of us.- Characters in Conflict in Adam BedeThis inconsistency in character development in the novel disrupts its formal integrity and impacts the reader's allegiance and empathy for the character of Adam.



