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George Eliot and the Novel of Vocation

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Mintz has discovered a new sub-genre of the novel of vocation. In the nineteenth century, he maintains, work ceased to be merely what one did for a living or out of a sense of duty and became a vehicle for self-definition and self-realization. The change was prepared for by the growth of professions and the increase in middle-class career opportunities, He shows how George Eliot, in particular, linked these new social possibilities to the older Puritan doctrine of calling or vocation, achieving in her late novels a fictional structure that could encompass the conflicting energies of the age. In the idea of vocation she found a way to explore how far it is possible to be ambitious both for oneself and for a large cause, and a way to probe the contradictions between ambitious, self-defining work and the older institutions; of family, community, and religion. The book is solidly grounded in cultural and historical reality. Although Mintz concentrate on George Eliot and especially Middlemarch , he also examines the conceptions of self and work in Victorian biographies and autobiographies and the emergence in late-nineteenth-century fiction of the idea of the vocation of art.

Hardcover

First published May 22, 1978

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Alan Mintz

19 books

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Profile Image for Tom L.
33 reviews22 followers
August 3, 2015
An invaluable resource on the origins of what the author calls 'the novel of vocation' - a genre of which George Eliot was both an undisputed master and early pioneer.
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