Synopses & Reviews
A masterclass in attentive reading that opens up brilliant insights into two of George Eliot's novels. J. Hillis Miller shows how reading Eliot's great novels Adam Bede and Middlemarch can provide the pleasure and insight unique to reading fiction. The readings focus on famous passages in which the narrator reflects about the story and its characters. What do these passages really say? What role does Eliot's figurative language play in her storytelling? These stories deal with uncovering their characters' ideological illusions. By understanding how to expose these illusions, readers will be able to recognize how easy it is to be taken in by such mistakes, both in the personal and in the political worlds.
Synopsis
A masterclass in attentive reading offering brilliant insights into two of George Eliot's novels
Synopsis
A masterclass in attentive reading that opens up brilliant insights into two of George Eliot's novels Can reading Adam Bede and Middlemarch be justified in this time of climate change, financial meltdown and ineffective politicians? J. Hillis Miller shows how, to be read for today, they must be read slowly, closely and carefully, with much attention to linguistic detail and especially to figures of speech. By relating mistakes like Dorothea's about Casaubon to current affairs, Miller's 'readings for today' can help us to come to terms with our human, social and political situation and even inspire us to act to ameliorate it.
About the Author
J. Hillis Miller is Distinguished Research Professor at the University of California at Irvine