
Adam Bede, Realism, the Past, and Readers in 1859
Author(s) -
Gail Marshall
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
english literature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2420-823X
pISSN - 2385-1635
DOI - 10.30687/el/2420-823x/2019/01/002
Subject(s) - reading (process) , context (archaeology) , publishing , realism , george (robot) , politics , adam smith , literature , sociology , aesthetics , media studies , history , art , art history , law , political science , archaeology , neoclassical economics , economics
This article gives an account of the immediate publication context of George Eliot’s first novel, Adam Bede , in terms of competing opportunities for leisure, anxieties about the reading of fiction, the publishing industry, and the social and political context of February 1859. It examines the way in which the novel engages with its first readers, specifically through its treatment of the experience of reading fiction, and the ways in which Adam Bede differs from readers’ previous experiences. The article argues that the novel’s impact is determined by its engagement with the past of its setting, and by the ways it which it encourages a historically-nuanced appreciation in its readers, and that these factors are integral to Eliot’s articulating a new form of realist fiction.