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Before George Eliot
Marian Evans and the Periodical Press
A revisionary study of the impact of Marian Evans's early periodical-press career on her later success as a novelist.
Fionnuala Dillane (Author)
9781107035652, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 15 August 2013
290 pages, 7 b/w illus.
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.56 kg
"In her extended portrait of Marian Evans as an astute and flexible professional in the periodical marketplace, Fionnuala Dillane offers a welcome corrective to the image of George Eliot as a reclusive sibyl … Dillane’s grounding of Evans’s many narrative personae in specific practices of her periodical culture also serves to dislodge the stubborn image of Eliot as the goddess of sympathy. Dillane is refreshingly skeptical about that image, creating in its stead a writer alert to what her public required and strategic about accommodating her variable styles to those needs."
Rosemarie Bodenheimer, Victorian Studies
Fionnuala Dillane revisits the first decade of Marian Evans's working life to explore the influence of the periodical press on her emergence as George Eliot and on her subsequent responses to fame. This interdisciplinary study discusses the significance of Evans's work as a journalist, editor and serial-fiction writer in the periodical press from the late 1840s to the late 1850s and positions this early career against critical responses to Evans's later literary persona, George Eliot. Dillane argues that Evans's association with the nineteenth-century periodical industry, that dominant cultural force of the age, is important for its illumination of Evans's understanding of the formation of reading audiences, the development of literary genres and the cultivation of literary celebrity.
Introduction: Marian Evans and the periodical press
1. 'The character of editress': Marian Evans at the Westminster Review
2. 'Working for one's bread': Marian Evans the journalist
3. Staging 'Scenes' in Blackwood's Magazine: melodrama, narrative voice and the Blackwood's Man
4. After Marian Evans: the importance of being George Eliot
5. Last impressions: Marian Evans takes on her audience.
Subject Areas: Cultural studies [JFC], Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers [DSK], Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 [DSBF]