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Adam Bede's dutch realism and the novelist's point of view

Gould, Rebecca Ruth

Authors



Abstract

In her first novel, Adam Bede (1859), George Eliot offered the first systematic defense of her literary aesthetic. Eliot turned to early modern Dutch painting to justify her choice to render the quotidian life of the non-elite, and thereby provocatively extended philosophical and literary approaches to representation. Whereas Hegel’s wariness toward the Dutch painterly aesthetic participates in modern philosophy’s quest to transcend the mundane, Eliot’s celebration of the mundane reveals the sublimity of everyday experience, and helps us overcome the “philosophy-as-epistemology” that, in Richard Rorty’s argument, characterizes and limits modern thought.

Citation

Gould, R. R. (2012). Adam Bede's dutch realism and the novelist's point of view. Philosophy and Literature, 36(2), 404-423. https://doi.org/10.1353/phl.2012.0031

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Oct 1, 2012
Deposit Date Oct 11, 2023
Journal Philosophy and Literature
Print ISSN 0190-0013
Electronic ISSN 1086-329X
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 36
Issue 2
Pages 404-423
DOI https://doi.org/10.1353/phl.2012.0031