Home 5 Articles and Reports 5 The Other Side of George Eliot

The Other Side of George Eliot

In the history of English literature, names such as Charles Dickens and Jane Austen shine as towering landmarks of the classic novel, while the name George Eliot – or Mary Ann Evans – often stands in the shadows, despite her being one of the most influential authors of the nineteenth century. Eliot chose a masculine pen name to avoid the prejudices faced by women writers in her time, yet she later paid the price for that choice, as her presence in literary memory remained far less prominent than her achievements deserved.

 

Her novels, including Middlemarch and The Mill on the Floss, delve deep into the human psyche and redraw the intricate details of social and political life with unprecedented realism. Her style was distinguished by a fusion of narrative storytelling with philosophical and moral inquiry, lending her works an added layer of intellectual depth. Yet this very intellectualism often made her less accessible to the wider reading public, which was more drawn to the direct drama and heightened emotion of Dickens’s works, or to the quiet romance found in Austen’s novels.

 

Social and critical circumstances also played a part in marginalizing her place in the canon. Her works were repeatedly placed in comparison with those of her male contemporaries, and judged by critical standards steeped in masculine ideals that equated “universality” and “the general human experience” with male perspectives. Meanwhile, women writers, even the most accomplished among them, were confined to the narrow label of “women’s literature,” a category that curtailed their reception as voices capable of transcending gendered boundaries.

 

Beyond the shadows of Dickens and Austen, Eliot’s career reveals her profound influence on the evolution of the realist novel. She inspired later authors – from Virginia Woolf, who called her “the greatest English novelist,” to a generation of writers who embraced her deep insight into human character and its psychological construction, a vision ahead of its time that opened new horizons for the modern novel. Her books do more than tell stories; they reshape the reader’s understanding of human relationships, raising questions about morality, individual freedom, and the meaning of life in a changing society.

 

It can be said that rediscovering George Eliot today is not merely an act of critical correction, but an invitation to revisit the classics with fresh criteria that recognize the worth of voices that resisted marginalization. Perhaps the time has come to place her alongside Dickens and Austen, not as “the female face” of Victorian literature, but as one of its central pillars, a writer whose mark is no less significant than that of any of her contemporaries, not only in England but across the world.

Recent News

26Feb
Opening Submissions for the Sharjah Journal for Archaeological Studies

Opening Submissions for the Sharjah Journal for Archaeological Studies

The Sharjah Archaeology Authority (SAA) has announced the opening of applications and submissions for publication in the Sharjah Journal for Archaeological Studies, a peer-reviewed academic journal issued under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Dr Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah. The initiative underscores SAA’s commitment to supporting specialized […]

26Feb
Wuthering Heights Returns to Bestseller Lists

Wuthering Heights Returns to Bestseller Lists

Sales of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights have risen by 469% in the UK since last year, as anticipation builds for Emerald Fennell’s bold and highly anticipated film adaptation, figures from Penguin Classics UK show. In January of this year, 10,670 copies were sold, compared with 1,875 in January 2025, in what Penguin has described as […]

23Feb
Oman Named SIBF 2026 Guest of Honour

Oman Named SIBF 2026 Guest of Honour

Her Highness Sheikha Bodour bint Sultan Al Qasimi, Chairperson of the Sharjah Book Authority (SBA), has announced the Sultanate of Oman as Guest of Honour for the upcoming 45th edition of the Sharjah International Book Fair (SIBF). The selection recognises Oman’s contributions of Arab literature and thought and honours its longstanding intellectual presence across the […]

Related Posts

 The Lion Women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali

 The Lion Women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali

Title: The Lion Women of Tehran Author: Marjan Kamali Publisher: Simon & Schuster Originally published: 2 July 2024   Marjan Kamali’s The Lion Women of Tehran is a captivating historical fiction novel that paints a vivid portrait of Iran in the mid-20th century....

Books you need to read in 2026

Books you need to read in 2026

As we start 2026 we have picked some exciting books that will be published this year which should keep you occupied during the chilly winter months, or during the long awaited summer when you can enjoy reading in the garden or on an exotic holiday. Whatever you do we...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this