Monday, October 21, 2013

Summary & Analysis of "Women, Energy, and Middlemarch"

Summary:

The piece of criticism I chose to read is written by Lee R. Edwards and is called "Women, Energy, and Middlemarch." Edwards discusses how the issue of energy is shown throughout Eliot's novel, especially in regard to the female characters. She specifically focuses on the characters of Dorothea and Rosamond, saying that, even though the two are definitely opposites, they both have this energy that readers can feel in the book. Edwards feels that both women have this strong energy, but that both are unable to become what they really want to (and probably could become) due to the fact that they are female. For Edwards, Dorothea is the biggest disappointment of the novel because she shows so much promise in the beginning of really becoming someone who could affect the world. By the end, she is merely a wife and mother, only able to do what she's passionate about through her husband. Edwards is not happy with the fact that Eliot has Dorothea marry Will Ladislaw, but she states, "The objection is not that Dorothea should have married Will but that she should have married anybody at all" (628).

Analysis:

I chose to write about Edward's piece because I truly agreed with everything she said regarding the female characters. As readers, we have to acknowledge that the Victorian age was a different time period and that women just couldn't really have independent lives, but I still found myself hoping that Eliot would end the novel with Dorothea doing great things as a reformer. Even Rosamond has goals--even though they are just to move up in society--but she too cannot do anything without the help of a husband. Edwards is exactly right in pointing out how Dorothea is such a great character. She says, "I saw in Dorothea an endorsement I had found in no other book I had read of energy and social commitment on the part of a woman in combination, as I believed, with the promise that these qualities did not render the possessor either a social misfit or a danger to herself or others" (624). In other words, Edwards (and I too) believed that Dorothea was going to be a new kind of female character not defined by the males in her life. When she marries Will, she gives up her own dreams and settles on being a wife. It's true that she has realized that she loves him, but it's hard to swallow as a reader because he gets to have the career that Dorothea always wanted herself. It makes me wonder if there were any other options for Eliot in regards to the female characters. I find myself wishing that the novel could have been written just 50 years later so maybe there could have been different opportunities for both Rosamond and Dorothea. It seems like Eliot had pretty modern opinions, but ultimately let her novel continue to reflect the status quo of the position of women during the Victorian period.


Saturday, October 5, 2013

Summary & Analysis of "Contemporary Reviews of Middlemarch"

Summary:

I chose to read four contemporary reviews for this post. I read "Middlemarch" by Sidney Colvin, "George Eliot's Middlemarch" by Henry James, "George Eliot" by Joseph Jacobs, and "On Middlemarch" by Leslie Stephen. Colvin's review was written in 1873 and has a lot of good words to say about Eliot as a writer. He talks about how Eliot had 'two worlds' she dealt with: the first world is everything Eliot experienced in her own personal life, and the second world is her reflection on that experience. Colvin argues that this ties into the way Middlemarch is written because he sees a contrast between the 'matter' of the piece--the antiquated characters, setting, and plot in general--and the 'manner' in which Eliot writes about them--which Colvin argues is quite modern. James' review was written in 1873 also, but his review is more critical than some of the others. James claims Middlemarch is a "treasure-house of details, but an indifferent whole" (578). He praises Eliot for her characters and acknowledges her superb writing, but also believes she missed some opportunities in the novel (which I'll talk more about in my analysis). Jacobs' short review was written in 1891 and basically talks about the morals and ethics at play in Eliot's novels. He calls Middlemarch "a criticism of life" (581), and argues that Eliot's sense of morality is what sets her novels apart from anyone else's in the Victorian era. Stephen's review was written in 1902 and found both positives and negatives in the novel. He argues that the 'moral' of Middlemarch "would apparently be that the desirable thing is to do your work well in the position to which Providence has assigned you, and not to bother about 'ideals' at all" (585). However, Stephen argues that in spite of this message, Middlemarch is still "clearly a work of extraordinary power, full of subtle and accurate observation" (586).

Analysis:

Henry James' piece was the most fascinating piece of criticism to me because I really respect him as an author already, and he brought up many interesting points about the novel that I hadn't thought about in much detail. He calls Middlemarch "at once one of the strongest and one of the weakest of English novels" (578), and it seems like he believed that the novel had so much potential, but ultimately fell short. One of the issues he took with the novel is how Eliot has a tendency to "make light of the serious elements of the story and to sacrifice them to the more trivial ones" (579). When I read that statement, I knew exactly what James meant because there were many times in Middlemarch where I wanted to (for example) spend more time in Dorothea's mind, hearing her thoughts about her disastrous marriage or see more of Fred and Mary's relationship. These are big issues, but they get the same amount of coverage as smaller details that don't seem to have much importance to the overall themes of the novel. However, I could see the reason Eliot might be doing this on purpose. Middlemarch is supposed to be a comprehensive view of life in a small town, which involves both large issues and small, seemingly unimportant issues. As readers, we really are getting a complete picture of what life is like for the different characters, and Eliot makes the 'big stuff' just as important to the characters' lives as the 'small stuff.' James also has a big problem with the character of Ladislaw. He states, "The figure of Will Ladislaw is a beautiful attempt, with many finely-completed points; but on the whole it seems to us a failure. It is the only eminent failure in the book." He goes on to state, "We have not found ourselves believing in Ladislaw as we believe in Dorothea, in Mary Garth, in Rosamond, in Lydgate, in Mr. Brooke and Mr. Casaubon" (580). James points out how Eliot intended Ladislaw to be the hero and Dorothea the heroine, but how Lydgate is the true hero of Middlemarch. I agree with James about the character of Ladislaw. He is one of the few characters in the novel that I just can't really connect with and don't feel any sympathy for; he just doesn't feel real. Lydgate, on the other hand, comes alive in the reading for me, and I love the section on page 182 where Dorothea and Lydgate come into contact with another after Casaubon's heart attack. They are both great characters that stand out, and I agree with James when he states that he wanted Lydgate and Dorothea to be the ones to end up together. Instead of that, however, Eliot has Lydgate get into an unhappy marriage, which makes sense for her purpose of showing the many disappointments in life. James points this out when he writes, "The author has desired to be strictly real and to adhere to the facts of the common lot, and she has given us a powerful version of that typical human drama, the struggles of an ambitious soul with sordid disappointments and vulgar embarrassments" (581). Ultimately, then, Middlemarch is an extremely successful novel despite the small flaws James illuminates.