Eliot, George - Kathleen Blake (essay date 1980)
Kathleen Blake (essay date 1980)
SOURCE: " Armgart—George Eliot on the Woman Artist," in Victorian Poetry, Vol. 18, No. 1, Spring, 1980, pp. 75-80.
[In the following excerpt, Blake argues that the poem "Armgart" centers around the conflict between love and art that exists for female artists.]
A more indefatigable and psychologically adept husband-therapist of a woman's creative drive than George Henry Lewes cannot be imagined. George Eliot dedicated her Legend of Jubai and Other Poems (1871) "To my beloved Husband, George Henry Lewes, whose cherishing tenderness for twenty years has alone made my work possible to me." And yet Jubal contains the dramatic poem "Armgart," which like Middlemarch and Daniel Deronda (1871-72, 1876) poses the incompatibility of love and art for the artist who is a woman….
"Armgart" is … very divided about the female artist who is "not a loving woman." The poem is...
[The entire page is 1435 words long]
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Criticism
- The Nation (review date 1868)
- Henry James (review date 1868)
- London Quarterly Review (review date 1868)
- The Spectator (review date 1874)
- Rose Elizabeth Cleveland (essay date 1885)
- Miriam Allott (essay date 1961)
- K. M. Newton (essay date 1973)
- William Baker (essay date 1975)
- Kathleen Blake (essay date 1980)
- Karen B. Mann (essay date 1980)
- F. B. Pinion (essay date 1981)
- Victor A. Neufeldt (essay date 1983)
- Sylvia Kasey Marks (essay date 1983)
- Bonnie J. Lisle (essay date 1984)
- James Krasner (essay date 1994)
- Michael Ragussis (essay date 1995)
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