Felix Holt, the Radical, George Eliot - L. R. Leavis (essay date 1986)

L. R. Leavis (essay date 1986)

SOURCE: Leavis, L. R. “George Eliot's Creative Mind, Felix Holt as the Turning Point of Her Art.” English Studies 67, no. 4 (August 1986): 311-26.

[In the following essay, Leavis discusses how the failure of Felix Holt led to the success of Middlemarch.]

In our time when literary criticism has been generally discarded for the fashionable mechanics of structuralism and post-structuralism, George Eliot's novels can still raise extreme responses. The Jewish sections of Daniel Deronda or the ‘failed St. Theresa’ emphasis on Dorothea Brooke in Middlemarch still find their admirers,1 while those hating her writing can reject even her best novels, labelling her as an infuriatingly emotional Victorian encumbered with a heavy pedantic style and often breaking into the sustained didacticism of the self-educated. Robert Liddell's The Novels of George Eliot (London,...

[The entire page is 10181 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: