Dark Smiles - Race and Desire in George Eliot (Hardcover, 1)


Although George Eliot has long been described as "the novelist of the Midlands," she often brought the outer reaches of the empire home in her work. "Dark Smiles: Race and Desire in George Eliot" studies Eliot's problematic, career-long interest in representing racial and ethnic Otherness.
Placing Eliot's diverse and wide-ranging treatment of Otherness in its contemporary context, Alicia Carroll argues that Eliot both engages and resists traditional racial and ethnic representations of Otherness. Carroll finds that Eliot, like other women writers of her time, often appropriates narratives of Otherness to explore issues silenced in mainstream Victorian culture, particularly the problem of the desirous woman. But if Otherness in Eliot's century was usually gendered as woman and constructed as the object of white male desire, Eliot often seeks to subvert that vision. Professor Carroll demonstrates Eliot's tendency to "exoticize" images of girlhood, vocation, and maternity in order to critique and explore gendered subjectivities. Indeed, the disruptive presence of a racial or ethnic outsider often fractures Eliot's narratives of community, creating a powerful critique of home culture.
The consistent reliance of Eliot's work upon racial and ethnic Otherness as a mode of cultural critique is explored here for the first time in its entirety.

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Product Description

Although George Eliot has long been described as "the novelist of the Midlands," she often brought the outer reaches of the empire home in her work. "Dark Smiles: Race and Desire in George Eliot" studies Eliot's problematic, career-long interest in representing racial and ethnic Otherness.
Placing Eliot's diverse and wide-ranging treatment of Otherness in its contemporary context, Alicia Carroll argues that Eliot both engages and resists traditional racial and ethnic representations of Otherness. Carroll finds that Eliot, like other women writers of her time, often appropriates narratives of Otherness to explore issues silenced in mainstream Victorian culture, particularly the problem of the desirous woman. But if Otherness in Eliot's century was usually gendered as woman and constructed as the object of white male desire, Eliot often seeks to subvert that vision. Professor Carroll demonstrates Eliot's tendency to "exoticize" images of girlhood, vocation, and maternity in order to critique and explore gendered subjectivities. Indeed, the disruptive presence of a racial or ethnic outsider often fractures Eliot's narratives of community, creating a powerful critique of home culture.
The consistent reliance of Eliot's work upon racial and ethnic Otherness as a mode of cultural critique is explored here for the first time in its entirety.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Ohio University Press

Country of origin

United States

Release date

February 2003

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

August 2002

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 23mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

208

Edition

1

ISBN-13

978-0-8214-1441-5

Barcode

9780821414415

Categories

LSN

0-8214-1441-0



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