In this Book
- George Eliot in Society: Travels Abroad and Sundays at the Priory
- Book
- 2013
- Published by: The Ohio State University Press
summary
Sundays at the Priory, the salons that George Eliot and George Henry Lewes conducted throughout the winter seasons during their later years in the 1870s, have generally earned descriptions as at once scandalous and dull, with few women in attendance, and guests approaching the Sibyl one by one to express their almost pious devotion. But both the guest lists of the salons—which include significant numbers of women, a substantial gay and lesbian contingent, and a group of singers who performed repeatedly—together with the couple’s frequent travels to European spas, where they encountered many of the guests likely to visit the Priory, revise the conclusion that George Eliot lived her entire life as an ostracized recluse. Instead, newly mined sources reveal George Eliot as a member of a large and elite, if slightly Bohemian, international social circle in which she moved as a literary celebrity and through which she stimulated her creative imagination as she composed her later poetry and fiction. George Eliot in Society: Travels Abroad and Sundays at the Priory by Kathleen McCormack draws attention to the survival of the literary/musical/artistic salon in the Victorian era, at a time in which social interactions coexisted with rising tensions that would soon obliterate the European spa/salon culture in which the Leweses participated, both as they traveled abroad and at Sundays at the Priory.
Table of Contents
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- Title Page, Copyright
- pp. 2-7
- Illustrations
- pp. ix-x
- Acknowledgements
- pp. xi-xii
- Abbreviations
- pp. xiii-15
- 1. Introduction: The Big "S"
- pp. 1-36
- 2. Travels Abroad: Taking the Waters
- pp. 37-56
- 3. Months of Sundays
- pp. 57-78
- 5. The Salons, The Spas, and Daniel Deronda
- pp. 111-136
- 6. John Cross and the Last Spa
- pp. 137-153
- Bibliography
- pp. 157-167
- Back Cover
- p. 194
Additional Information
ISBN
9780814270103
Related ISBN(s)
9780814212110
MARC Record
OCLC
867741098
Pages
208
Launched on MUSE
2013-11-04
Language
English
Open Access
Yes