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- Title
Large-Scale Sympathy and Simultaneity in George Eliot's Romola.
- Authors
JEWUSIAK, JACOB
- Abstract
This article argues that George Eliot’s Romola theorizes large-scale sympathy as a way of ethically engaging large groups of individuals outside one’s immediate social ambit. Yet the failed attempts of characters like Savonarola and Tito to imagine the experiences of unknown others suggests that large-scale sympathy estranges the sympathizing subject from the specificity of individual experience. This leads us to see a fault line at the heart of George Eliot’s work, whereby the necessity of imagining the simultaneous experience of others is continually brought into conflict with the impossibility—an d the danger—of doing so.
- Subjects
ROMOLA (Book : Eliot); ELIOT, George, 1819-1880; SYMPATHY in literature; 19TH century English fiction; LITERARY criticism; ENGLISH fiction; ENGLISH fiction -- History &; criticism; SAVONAROLA, Girolamo, 1452-1498; HISTORY of Florence, Italy, 1421-1737; FLORENCE (Italy) politics &; government; ETHICS in literature; THEMES in literature; WOMEN authors
- Publication
SEL: Studies in English Literature (Johns Hopkins), 2014, Vol 54, Issue 4, p853
- ISSN
0039-3657
- Publication type
Literary Criticism
- DOI
10.1353/sel.2014.0044