James Phelan’s Three Judgments in George Eliot’s Middlemarch

Authors

  • Xingjie Du Guangdong University of Foreign Studies

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/jltr.1202.06

Keywords:

James Phelan, interpretative judgment, ethical judgment, aesthetic judgment

Abstract

George Eliot, well-known as one of greatest realists in the 19th century, weaves multiple narratives in her representative work Middlemarch, presenting vividly the realistic picture of society between 1829 and 1832. The narrative clue of love affair between Dorothea, Casaubon and Will Ladislaw permeates the whole story, which attracts the attention of numerous scholars with fruitful, inspirational studies. However, few numbers of scholars delve into the controversial issue of Casaubon’s “will” in the story to analyze the moral values and thoughts expressed by the implied author. Thus, the paper attempts to analyze the issue of “will” by borrowing the concept of three judgments proposed by James Phelan to figure out how the implied author expresses her interpretative, ethical and aesthetical judgements by means of her distinct narrative.

References

Anderson, Amanda and Shaw, Harry E. (ed). (2013). A Companion to George Eliot. Malden: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Arata, Stephen, Haley, Madigan, Hunter, J. Paul and Wicke, Jennifer. (ed). (2015). A Companion to English Novel. Malden: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Booth Wayne C. (1983). The Rhetoric of Fiction. Chicago: The University of Chicago.

Eliot, George. (1996). Middlemarch. New York: Oxford University Press.

Fludernik, Monika. (2013). Eliot and Narrative. Anderson, Amanda and Shaw, Harry E. (ed). A Companion to George Eliot. Malden: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Genette, Gerald. (1983). Narrative Discourse. New York: Cornell University Press.

Herman, David. (2007). The Companion to Narrative. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Herman, David. (2002). Story Logic: Problems and Possibilities of Narrative. London: U of Nebraska P.

Levine, Caroline. (2013). Surprising Realism. Anderson, Amanda and Shaw, Harry E. (ed). A Companion to George Eliot. Malden: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Miller, Andrew H. (2013). Middlemarch: January in Lowick. Anderson, Amanda and Shaw, Harry E. (ed). A Companion to George Eliot. Malden: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Phelan, James. (1996). Narrative as Rhetoric. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press.

Phelan, James. (2007). Experiencing Fiction. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press.

Stone, Elizabeth. (2008). The Last Will and Testament in Literature: Rupture, Rivalry, and Sometimes Rapprochement from Middlemarch to Lemony Snicket. Family Process, Vol. 47, No. 4, P. 426-39.

Warhol, Robyn. (2013). “It Is of Little Use for Me to Tell You”: George Eliot’s Narrative Refusals. Anderson, Amanda and Shaw, Harry E. (ed). A Companion to George Eliot. Malden: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Downloads

Published

2021-03-01

Issue

Section

Articles