In this stimulating history of the ideas behind George Eliot''s novels Bernard Semmel explores Eliot''s imaginative use of the theme of inheritance as a metaphor for her political thinking. Through detailed analyses of Eliot''s novels and other writings and a study of the intellectual currents of the time Semmel demonstrates how and why Eliot''s views on inheritance provided central ideas for her fiction. Semmel uncovers Eliot''s intent when she wrote of the obligations of inheritance both in the common meaning of the term as in the transfer of goods and property from parents to children and in the more metaphoric sense of the inheritance of both the benefits and burdens of the historical past particularly those of the nation''s culture and traditions. He believes Eliot''s novels dwelt so insistently on the idea of inheritance in good part because she viewed herself as intellectually disinherited writing as she did at a time when much of England was being transformed from a traditional community to an alienating modern society and when moreover she suffered from a painful estrangement from her family. In this thought-provoking study Semmel dissects the politics of Eliot''s novels including Middlemarch Daniel Deronda Romola Felix Holt and Adam Bede and convincingly displays the relationship between Eliot''s variations on the theme of inheritance and her acceptance of Britain''s traditional policies of compromise and reform. All those interested in Victorian literature history and political thought will appreciate Semmel''s George Eliot and the Politics of National Inheritance.
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