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Eliot's Angels

George Eliot, René Girard, and Mimetic Desire

Eliot's Angels

George Eliot, René Girard, and Mimetic Desire

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Hardback

£52.00

Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN: 9780268202644
Number of Pages: 420
Published: 15/06/2022
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.9 cm

René Girard's mimetic theory opens up ways to make sense of the tension between the progressive politics of George Eliot and the conservative moralism of her narratives.

In this innovative study, Bernadette Waterman Ward offers an original rereading of George Eliot's work through the lens of René Girard's theories of mimetic desire, violence, and the sacred. It is a fruitful mapping of a twentieth-century theorist onto a nineteenth-century novelist, revealing Eliot's understanding of imitative desire, rivalry, idol-making, and sacrificial victimization as critical elements of the social mechanism. While the unresolved tensions between Eliot's realism and her desire to believe in gradual social amelioration have often been studied, Ward is especially adept at articulating the details of such conflict in Eliot's early novels. In particular, Ward emphasizes the clash between the ruthless mechanisms of mimetic desire and the idea of progress, or, as Eliot stated, "growing good"; Eliot's Christian sympathy for sacrificial victims against her general rejection of Christianity; and her resort to "Nemesis" to evade the systemic injustice of the social sphere. The "angels" in the title are characters who appear to offer a humanist way forward in the absence of religious belief. They are represented, in Girardian terms, as figures who try to rise above the snares of the mimetic machine to imitate Christ's self-sacrifice but are finally rendered ineffectual. Very few studies have tackled Eliot's short fiction and narrative poetry. Eliot's Angels gives the short fiction its due, and it will appeal to scholars of mimetic and literary theory, Victorianists, and students of the novel.

1. Introduction

2. Mimesis and George Eliot's Fiction

3. Mimetic Anthropology: Eliot's Early Years

4. The Intellectual Development of Mary Ann Evans

5. George Eliot's Clerical Life

6. The Magic of Sympathy in Adam Bede

7. Hell in Other People: Mimesis and The Lifted Veil

8. Death and the River: The Mill on the Floss

9. The Interruptions: Brother Jacob and Silas Marner

10. Romola, Full-Fledged Mimetic Angel

11. Foiled Tragedy and Felix Holt

12. Myth and the Artist: The Spanish Gypsy, The Legend of Jubal, and Armgart

13. The Apocalyptic Angel of Middlemarch

14. Satanic Masquerade: Daniel Deronda

15. Mimesis in Theophrastus Such

Afterword

Works Cited

Bernadette Waterman Ward

Bernadette Waterman Ward is associate professor of English at the University of Dallas. She is the author of World as Word: Philosophical Theology in Gerard Manley Hopkins.

"Bernadette Waterman Ward confirms the promise of Rene Girard's Deceit, Desire, and the Novel, that what came to be called mimetic theory had real explanatory power well beyond the authors Girard himself discussed." -William A. Johnsen, author of Violence and Modernism