Felix Holt, the Radical, George Eliot - Shifra Hockberg (essay date 1993)

Shifra Hockberg (essay date 1993)

SOURCE: Hockberg, Shifra. “Nomenclature and the Historical Matrix of Felix Holt.English Language Notes 31, no. 2 (December 1993): 46-56.

[In the following essay, Hockberg explores Eliot's use of names in Felix Holt to encode literary and historical references.]

Felix Holt, one of the least read of George Eliot's works, provides a fascinating example of the ways in which the novelist uses onomastics to encode historical and literary allusions into her text. Jerome Meckier, for instance, suggests that Eliot's novel “rewrite[s] the Book of Esther for Victorian audiences,” with Esther Lyon, like her Scriptural counterpart, functioning as a potential savior of her people.1 In a similar vein, Donald D. Stone notes the Byronic reference in Harold Transome's first name, as well as the novel's satire of Esther's romantic obsession with Byronic heroes.2...

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