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George Eliot

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That is the style of music for me. I never can make anything of this tip-top playing. ... Cult of Genius/ Victorians fascination with the celebrity' musician ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: George Eliot


1

George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans, Actually a girl)
1819 - 1880
2
Biography
  • Born 1819, Warwickshire
  • 1838 Charley and Caroline Bray. Charles Hennel
    An Inquiry Concerning the Origin of
    Christianity.
  • 1850 Sub-Editor for The Westminster Review.
  • 1854 Published a translation of Feuerbachs
    Essence of Christianity.
  • 1854 Began her relationship with Ceorge Henry
    Lewes.
  • 1857 Outcast from her family. Published Scenes
    of a Clerical Life under the pseudonym George
    Eliot. Followed by Adam Bede.
  • 1872 Published Middlemarch to great acclaim.
  • 1876 Published Daniel Deronda.
  • 1880 Died and was buried next to Lewes.

3
The Victorian Era
  • Queen Victoria reigned 1837 1901
  • Widely regarded as very successful and
    progressive reign
  • Height of British Empire

4
The Victorian Era - Politics
  • Height of the British Industrial Revolution
    (started late 18th century)
  • Boost of middle and working classes, particularly
    middle class
  • Government was still headed by the monarchy and
    only included members of the aristocracy as
    politicians

5
Philosophy
  • Utilitarianism concept of utility greatest
    good for the greatest number (Jeremy Bentham and
    J.S.Mill)
  • Empiricism experience as the only form of
    knowledge (Locke)
  • Charles Darwin The Origin of Species (1859)
    questioning previously accepted truths
  • The Victorian Era as a link between Romanticism
    and the 20th Century meant a clash between
    Romantic thought and emerging realism

6
Literature
  • The period of the realist novel and the narrative
    poem
  • Novelists
  • The Bronte Sisters, Charles Dickens, George
    Eliot, Thomas Hardy, Oscar Wilde, Robert Louis
    Stevenson, Robert Browning
  • Common Themes
  • Growing up
  • Society
  • No longer focusing on the novel of improvement
    of the Romantic period
  • Incorporation of politics in to literature, also
    evident in the journalistic writing of Eliot and
    Dickens

7
Music and Art
  • Music as a sublime and evocative art form
    (Romantic ideal of music)
  • In fact, music was often used as a form of social
    improvement/courtship in young women
    trivialisation of this sublime art form?
  • Beginning of mass marketing of culture
  • Questioned by philosophers and writers concerning
    the role and beauty of art (Ruskin and Carlyle)

8
Role of Women
  • Women as second class citizens, property of their
    husbands and innocent and passive though easily
    corruptible
  • However, start of changes in this period and many
    laws were passed in the second half of 19th
    century
  • Womens Rights becomes a central issue to
    Victorian society
  • The emergence of the new woman in the 1890s
  • Towards modern feminism and suffrage

9
Eliot and Religion
  • 1838 Charles Hennel An Inquiry Concerning the
    Essence of Christianity
  • 1873 Visited Cambridge University to discuss God,
    Immortality and Duty. with terrible earnestness
    how inconceivable to first, how unbelievable the
    second, and yet how peremptory and absolute the
    third.
  • Denial of religion Feminism
  • Christina Rossetti - Hope deferred Proverbs
    13.12.
  • Drop in Church going Up to Half of the
    Population
  • William Holman Hunt Reassertion of Religion

10
Eliot Arts
  • Arts
  • Visual Arts Adam Bede
  • Theatrical arts- Daniel Deronda
  • Musical arts
  • The significance of music is different from the
    other arts.
  • Music expresses inner reality
  • Theatrical and Visual arts are used to
    differentiate
  • All the arts give make the characters more
    dramatic, realistic and complex

11
Music
  • Music as a concept is
  • independent of music as an art
  • Represents a pure, authentic expression of self
  • The true portrayal of a persons inner self
  • Moral value of music, especially voice allows
    access to a characters soul
  • Eliot uses music to express strong feelings

12
Influences
  • George Eliot was influenced by Rousseau, Hegel,
    Hebert Spencer and Franz Liszt.
  • Hegel music is the language of soul
  • Franz Liszt
  • the ability of music to represent pure feeling is
    one its great values.
  • Music has the capacity to make each inner
    impulse audible without the assistance of reason
  • Rousseau the human voice is the source of all
    music and language
  • Spencer all music was originally vocal, and was
    created by the influence of pain and pleasure

13
Composer- Listener- Performer
  • Composer poetry is not a turning loose of
    emotion, but an escape from emotion it is not
    the expression of personality, but an escape from
    personality. What the poet and the composer were
    in fact, searching for was an authority, which
    manifested itself in tradition.
  • Listener music can have a subtle and even
    persuasive force on the listener
  • Performer- Singer
  • immediate expression of the performers self
  • Very correct singing of very fine music will
    avail little without a voice that can thrill the
    audience and take possessions of there souls
  • Performance was used for social improvement

14
  • Eliots treatment of music reflects a peculiar
    dichotomy in 19th century attitudes towards music
    theory, music was exhorted us the most sublime
    and expressive at the arts but in practice it was
    created as a social diversion a trivial
    accomplishment best left to ladies and
    foreigners
  • Alison Burley (2004)

15
The text itself.
  • Daniel Deronda was the last novel written by
    Eliot
  • Reflects key ideas / debates of the day
  • Jewish Zionist movement
  • Anti-Semitism/ the role of Jews in society
  • English philistinism
  • Role of women in society
  • Musics role in society, and attitudes towards
    music.

16
Summary of the text.
  • 1st extract Gwendolen sings for Klesmer
  • her ear goodand was able to keep in tuneher
    singing gave pleasure to ordinary hearers.
  • she had the rare advantage of looking almost
    prettier when she was singing that at other
    times.
  • I daresay I have been extremely ill taught, in
    addition to having no talent-only for liking
    music.
  • Klesmer That music you sing is beneath you.
    It is a form of melody which expresses a puerile
    state of culture no sense of the universal. It
    makes men small as they listen to it.
  • Klesmer plays one of his own compositions
    variety and depth of passion
  • People still want Gwendolen to sing That is
    the style of music for me. I never can make
    anything of this tip-top playing. I could listen
    to you singing all day.

17
Summary of the text continued.
  • 2nd extract Mirah sings for Klesmer
  • skip preliminaries/formalities you will not
    object to beginning our acquaintance by singing
    to me?
  • Mirah was a competent musician
  • Shall I accompany myself?
  • The song she had chosen was a fine setting
    ofwords
  • Klesmer Let us shake hands you are a musician.

18
Gwendolen vs. MirahThe Good /intellectual
versus the Popular?!?!
19
Character analysis
  • Herr Klesmer
  • GermanJewish musical genius
  • alarming cleverness / imperious magic in his
    fingers
  • Natural musician, passionate and emotionally
    involved with his music
  • bound to show what is good music
  • Underlying definition between good and
    popular music (high art vs. low art)
  • Represents German Romanticism/ Cult of Genius/
    Victorians fascination with the celebrity
    musician

20
Character analysis continued
  • Gwendolen
  • Uses music as a social tool, for social status
    and to cement her marital status
  • Ill taught, in addition to having no talent
    only liking for music
  • Gwendolen would have to work hard to become a
    fine musician if it were possible at all, just as
    she must work hard, Deronda tells her, to become
    worthy to lead a life that may be a blessing.
  • Sings popular music
  • Gwendolen would seem to suggest that music is
    like acting a form of deception

21
Character analysis continued
  • Mirah
  • Well educated in music
  • Antithesis of Gwendolen
  • Cant sew
  • Doesnt sing popular music
  • Even a natural gift for music like Mirahs,
    Klesmer suggests, must be nurtured and
    developed.
  • Klesmer to Mirah let us shake hands. You are
    a musician.

22
Jewish Zionism and its influence
  • Zionism
  • a Jewish movement that arose in the late 19th
    century
  • The response to growing anti-Semitism
  • Sought to re-establish a Jewish homeland in
    Palestine
  • Not received well in England
  • Eliots novel had a powerful influence on future
    Zionism
  • Novel was essentially a novel in support of the
    movement
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