Knowledge: Middlemarch and The Golden Bowl

  • Richard Freadman

Abstract

The theme of choice in Daniel Deronda and The Portrait of a Lady is much complicated by the problem of personal displacement; for a displaced person, be it an unwitting Jew or an expatriate American, must often choose at a certain self-conscious remove from coercive or consoling cultural norms. This may mean that no clear guidance emerges from a dominant traditional perspective on conduct; that narratives linking the youthful and adult, or the public and private, personality are absent or insufficient; or, in a more general sense, that certain fundamental assumptions about the authority of the individual moral agent cease to obtain. Choices thus become either impossibly opaque or a matter of isolated and anxious existential self-determination. In George Eliot’s ‘Jewish novel’ the prescriptive spiritual continuity of Judaism must be revealed before Deronda can choose; Isabel Archer, by contrast, marries into an indefinite exile which dictates that she must largely make unaided choices. The expatriate, poised between a native and an adopted culture, may invoke the categorical imperative and do what seems appropriate on a rough scale of general moral propriety, but it is a wintry prospect, especially if your husband is constitutionally incapable of the Kantian sense of conscience.

Keywords

Personal Knowledge Knowledge Theme Narrative Structure Individual Consciousness Equivalent Centre 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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Notes

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© Richard Freadman 1986

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  • Richard Freadman

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