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Born:
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Mary Anne Evans
22 November 1819 South Farm, Arbury Hall,, Warwickshire, England |
Died:
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22 December 1880 (aged 61)
4 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, London, England |
Resting place:
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Highgate Cemetery (East), Highgate,
London
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Pen name:
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George Eliot
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Occupation:
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Novelist
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Period:
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Victorian
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Notable work(s):
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The Mill on the Floss (1860), Silas Marner (1861), Middlemarch (1871–72), Daniel Deronda (1876)
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Mary Anne Evans known by her pen name George Eliot was an
English novelist, journalist, translator and one of the leading writers of the Victorian era. She wrote many novels.
We have questioned that why she used a male name as her pen name, because she
want that everyone should take her as a serious novelist by her work.
Life
of Eliot:
Mary Ann Evans was a third child of his father. The young Evans was obviously
intelligent and a voracious reader. Female authors
were published under their own names during Eliot's life, but she wanted to
escape the stereotype of women only writing lighthearted romances. An
additional factor in her use of a pen name may have been a desire to shield her
private life from public scrutiny and to prevent scandals attending her
relationship with the married George
Henry Lewes, with whom she lived for over 20 years.
Writing
style of George Eliot:
In Middlemarch and her other novel she used Erudite. . "Erudite" means extremely well educated. And this type
we can see in her novel while we read. All the historical,
scientific, cultural, and literary references the narrator makes contribute to
the sense that you're reading a book by one heck of a smart woman – just check
out the "Shout outs" section to see what a huge range of references
Eliot makes. And that style is what earned George Eliot the reputation as a "Victorian Sage" – in other words, a writer who was
educated and intelligent enough to comment on almost any aspect of contemporary
life, from arts and literature to politics and science.
Eliot’s style has
three facets. There is her use of startlingly original metaphors to encapsulate
her characters and foreshadow their destinies. Thus, we get a vivid premonition
of marital disaster, when Casaubon, the Dryasdust scholar in Middlemarch, is said to woo his bride with a “frigid rhetoric . . . as sincere as the bark
of a dog, or the cawing of an amorous rook.” There is a similar sense of problems in store when, in the same novel,
the superficially charming.
The general character
of all her novel may be described in the author’s own term, a psychological
realism. This means that George Eliot sought to do in her novels what browning attempted in his
poetry that is to represent inner struggle of a soul and to reveal the motives,
impulses and hereditary influences which govern human action. George Eliot is
not content until she has minutely explained the motives of her character and
the moral lesson to be learned from them. In George Eliot’s novels the character
develops gradually as we come to know them.
Rosamond
Vincy is described as someone who “acted her own character, and so well, that she
did not know it to be precisely her own.”
Her work:
She was famous for his
seven novels. It’s contains as her famous work done by her. Her major works
are:
·
Adam Bede, 1859
·
The Mill on the Floss, 1860
·
Silas Marner, 1861
·
Romola,
1863
·
Felix Holt, the Radical, 1866
·
Middlemarch, 1871–72
·
Daniel Deronda, 1876
Adam Bede

According to the Oxford Companion to English Literature (1967),
"The plot is founded on a story told to George Eliot by her aunt
Elizabeth Evans, a Methodist preacher, and the original of Dinah Morris of the novel, of a confession of
child-murder, made to her by a girl in prison."
In this novel George
Eliot made love rectangle between characters. Adam love Hetty but Hetty attracted to Arthur. When Adam interrupts between them, Adam and Arthur fight. Then Arthur leaves Hetty and Arthur and Hetty decide to
marry but before their marriage Adam find that she is pregnant. So Hetty go to
find Arthur but she not fined him. Then she tried to abandon her child but
child already dead. So she caught and prisoner and sentenced to hang. She feel
shame and guilty for her crime.
After some day Arthur came to
know that he love Dinah very much so in the end they marry with each other and
leave peaceful life. This is very good novel written by her.
The Mill on the Floss
The mill of the floss
is written by George Eliot published in three volume in 1860. This novel deals with historical themes in this novel we find
many historical references. It includes autobiographical elements, and reflects
the disgrace that George Eliot herself experienced while in a lengthy
relationship with a married man.
Maggie Tulliver is the central character of the book. The story begins when she
is 9 years old. Tom and Maggie have a close yet complex bond which continues
throughout the novel. Tom’s pragmatic and reserved nature clashes with Maggie’s
idealism and fervor for intellectual gains and experienced. After some time
Mr.Tulliver died. Maggie’s brief exile ends when the river floods. It criticized
as a dues ex machina. Having
struggled through the waters in a boat find Tom and old Mill. In a brief tender
moment the brother and sister are reconciled from all past differences when
their boat capsizes, the two drown in an embrace, thus giving the book its
Biblical epigraph, "In
their death they were not divided."
Silas Marner
Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe is the third novel by George
Eliot, published in 1861. An outwardly simple tale of a linen weaver, it is notable for
its strong realism and its sophisticated treatment of a
variety of issues ranging from religion to industrialization to community.
In this novel George Eliot
wrote the story of Silas Marner and his struggle as pick-pocketer and thief. He
brought up a girl name Eppie child of Molly Farren. Eppie changed silas
completely and make bond with him. Thus this story reaches its end.
The novel is set in
the early years of the 19th century. Silas Marner, a weaver, is a member of a
small Calvinist congregation in
Lantern Yard, a slum street in an unnamed city in Northern England.
‘Silas Marner’, Eliot
combines symbolism with a historically precise setting to create a tale of love
and hope. On one level, the book has a strong moral tract: the bad character,
Dunstan Cass, gets his just
deserts, while the pitiable character, Silas Marner, is ultimately richly
rewarded, and his miserliness corrected. The novel explores the issues of
redemptive love, the notion of community, the role of religion, the status of
the gentry and family, and impacts of industrialization. While religion and
religious devotion play a strong part in this text,
Romola
Romola (1862–63) is a historical
novel by George Eliot set in the fifteenth century, and is "a deep study of life in the city of Florence from an intellectual, artistic,
religious, and social point of view".
The story of this
novel taken from historical events during the Italian Renaissance, and includes in its plot
several notable figures from Florentine
history. Renaissance Florence and Victorian England were times of
philosophical, religious and social turbulence. Romola is the female
protagonist through whom the surrounding world is evaluated. The story also
deals with the dilemma of where the duty of obedience for women ends and the
duty of resistance begin.
Felix Holt, the Radical
Felix Holt, the Radical (1866) is a social
novel written by George Eliot about political disputes in a small
English town at the time of the First Reform Act of
1832. Set during the time of the Reform Act of 1832, the story centers
on an election contested by Harold Transom, a local landowner, in the "Radical cause"
("Radical" because Transom’s version of "radicalism"
isn't radical at all, but rather an application of the term to his politically
stagnate lifestyle), contrary to his family's Tory
traditions. Contrasting with the opportunism of Transom is the sincere, but
opinionated, Radical Felix Holt. A subplot concerns the stepdaughter of a Dissenting minister who is the true
heir to the Transom estate, but who is unaware of the fact. She becomes the
object of the affections of both Harold Transom and Felix Holt.
Middlemarch
‘Middlemarch’ is name of town in this novel. Its
full title is “Middlemarch:
A study of provincial life”. This novel starts with Quotation. It is about Italian life. In this
novel present most character than other novel written by her. Middlemarch also
showed one symbolic river of the flow.
‘Middlemarch’ is a
novel of relations. A story of a young idealistic girl. Dorothea Brook is main
character of this novel. Dorothea Brooke and Celia Brooke are sisters. In this
novel George Eliot portrait both characters contradiction nature.
In this novel some comical
elements and comically named characters Mr. Brooke, the "tiny aunt"
Miss Noble, Mrs. Dollop this is
realistic novel. Realism present by George Eliot. Because of some characters voices and opinions
of different characters we become aware of various issues of the day. The novel also known as the work of
social criticism.’
‘Middlemarch’ has retained its popularity and status as one of the
masterpieces of English fiction, although
some reviewers have expressed dissatisfaction at the destiny recorded for
Dorothea. In separate centuries, Florence Nightingale and Kate Millett both remarked on the eventual subordination of Dorothea's own
dreams to those of her admirer, Ladislaw. However, in the epilogue George Eliot
herself acknowledges the regrettable waste of Dorothea's potential, blaming
social conditions. Virginia Woolf gave the book unstinting praise, describing Middlemarch as "the magnificent book that,
with all its imperfections, is one of the few English novels written for
grown-up people".
The book examines the role of education in the lives of the character
and how such education and study has affected them.
Daniel Deronda
Daniel Deronda is last
novel written by George Eliot completed by her .Its mixture of social satire
and moral searching, along with a sympathetic rendering of Jewish proto-Zionist and Kabalistic ideas, has made it a controversial
final statement of one of the greatest of Victorian novelists. In this novel George Eliot
portrait a character Daniel Deronda main character of this novel struggle by
Daniel Deronda shown by her.
Conclusion:
Thus we can
say that George Eliot was a famous and for most readable novelist of Victorian
age. Her 1872 work Middlemarch has been described by Martin Amis and Julian
Barnes as the greatest novel in the English language.



first of all i say Hetal your Assignment topic is good ,in this assignment was given brief introduction of his novel , his work and covered information of his first to last novel. very well work in this assignment.
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