Daniel Deronda (Paperback)
| Author: George Eliot |
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Product Details:
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Lightning Source Inc
ISBN-10: 1420931687
ISBN-13: 9781420931686
Sku: 210628646
Publish Date: 1/5/2009
Pages:
484
Age Range:
NA
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| George Eliot was considered one of the greatest writers of the Victorian era and in this classic 1876 work, the last that she had completed, we find the only novel set in that era. "Daniel Deronda" begins by exploring the romantic relationship of its title character with Gwendolen Harleth and then through two separate flashbacks explores the history of the two characters. The novel, which was controversial for its exploration of the Jewish Zionist movement, is a mixture of social satire and an exploration of the morality of Victorian society. "Daniel Deronda" remains one of Eliot''s most popular works and is an excellent example of the author''s immense literary talent. |
Annotation:
Daniel Deronda, raised by Gentiles, seeks his Jewish roots, finding in Judaism--and, particularly, in Zionism--the meaning of his life. His story intersects with that of Gwendolyn Harleth, who marries the jaded and depraved aristocrat Grandcourt, repents her bad judgment, and falls in love with Daniel. Through his moral guidance, she finds a way to live as a free and moral person, but Daniel marries Mirah and becomes a leader of the Zionist movement.
Daniel Deronda, raised by Gentiles, seeks his Jewish roots, finding in Judaism--and, particularly, in Zionism--the meaning of his life. His story intersects with that of Gwendolyn Harleth, who marries the jaded and depraved aristocrat Grandcourt, repents her bad judgment, and falls in love with Daniel. Through his moral guidance, she finds a way to live as a free and moral person, but Daniel marries Mirah and becomes a leader of the Zionist movement.
Author Bio
George Eliot
George Eliot's mother died young, and young Mary Ann Evans (as she was known until she was nearly 40) was raised by her father in a country town. She refused to embrace the fundamentalist religion of her father and, when she was 16, objected to going to church with him; however, she agreed to accompany him as long as she could be free to let her mind wander during the service. Soon after that, she translated THE LIFE OF JESUS by the German theologian David Friedrich Strauss into English--a work that questioned the divinity of Christ. Following the death of her father, George Eliot was free to lead the life of an intellectual and scholar; she moved to London and began to write for, and eventually edit, the Westminster Review. It was there that she met the man with whom she eventually spent most of her life, George Henry Lewes, who was married to another woman--a daring move in Victorian England, which resulted in Eliot's condemnation by her family, including her beloved brother, Isaac. (She explored the complexities of the brother-sister bond in her 1860 novel, THE MILL ON THE FLOSS.) With Lewes's encouragement, Eliot began to write novels and stories, and began publishing them in 1857, taking the pseudonym "George Eliot" largely to avoid the prejudice her public might have toward her unorthodox living arrangements. Upon Lewes's death, Eliot married a much younger man--delighting her family, who finally considered her respectable--but she died six months after the wedding. She became widely celebrated for her fiction, and is considered one of the greatest novelists of all time; D. H. Lawrence called her the first modern novelist. All her life, George Eliot was torn between her reverence for the old ways--religious, political, and social--in which she was raised, and the new, represented by her intellectual agnosticism and bohemian life. Always, she placed the responsibility for a person's life on the moral choices he or she makes, and she believed that the function of the novel is to increase people's sympathy and tolerance for others. As a strictly realist writer, she embraced the doctrine that "all truth and beauty are to be attained by a humble and faithful study of nature, and not by substituting vague forms...in place of definite, substantial reality."
Praise
Times Literary Supplement
"It's quite interesting that throughout 'Daniel Deronda' nobody likes Gwendolen Harleth." - A. S. Byatt 10/06/1995
"It's quite interesting that throughout 'Daniel Deronda' nobody likes Gwendolen Harleth." - A. S. Byatt 10/06/1995

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