The mill on the floss
Material type: TextSeries: Peacock ClassicsPublication details: New Delhi Peacock Books 2010Description: 547pISBN: 9788124800164Subject(s): England | Brothers and sisters | Conflict of generations | Loss (Psychology) | Young women | Vendetta | Water mills | Manners and customsDDC classification: 823.8 Summary: The novel is set in the period of George Eliot’s own childhood, in the pre-railway, pre-industrial age, with its settled and secure order, and patterns of life and trade inherited from the earlier period. Tom and Maggie, the principal characters, are the children of the honest hut ignorant and obstinate Mr. Tulliver, the miller of Dorlcote Mill on the Floss. Tom is prosaic youth, narrow of imagination and intellect, animated by conscious rectitude and a disposition to control others. Maggie, in contrast, is highly strung, intelligent, emotional, and, as a child, rebellious. Her aspirations go beyond the complacent, provincial world in which she lives, and her situation as a clever female in a man’s world indirectly reflects that of the author herself.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | Stack | 823.8 ELI/M (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 41039 |
Browsing Kannur University Central Library shelves, Shelving location: Stack, Collection: Stack Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
823.8 EDW/C Charlotte Bronte: the novels | 823.8 ELI/A Adam Bede | 823.8 ELI/M Middlemarch | 823.8 ELI/M The mill on the floss | 823.8 FOR/A Aspects of the novel | 823.8 FRA/V Victorian quest romance: Stevenson, Haggard, Kipling and Conan Doyle | 823.8 GEO George Eliot: The mill on the floss and Silas Marner, a casebook |
The novel is set in the period of George Eliot’s own childhood, in the pre-railway, pre-industrial age, with its settled and secure order, and patterns of life and trade inherited from the earlier period. Tom and Maggie, the principal characters, are the children of the honest hut ignorant and obstinate Mr. Tulliver, the miller of Dorlcote Mill on the Floss. Tom is prosaic youth, narrow of imagination and intellect, animated by conscious rectitude and a disposition to control others. Maggie, in contrast, is highly strung, intelligent, emotional, and, as a child, rebellious. Her aspirations go beyond the complacent, provincial world in which she lives, and her situation as a clever female in a man’s world indirectly reflects that of the author herself.
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