English 220 - NOVEL IN ENGLAND: ELIOT- WOOLF

Fall
2018
01
4.00
Michael Gorra
MW 01:10-02:30
Smith College
10733-F18
SEELYE 102
mgorra@smith.edu
What it would be like to hear the squirrel’s heartbeat, to open one’s mind fully to the sensations and impressions of the world around us? The image belongs to George Eliot, who in Middlemarch suggested we couldn’t bear it; we would die of a sensory overload, the “roar on the other side of silence.” The novelists of the generations that followed tried to live in that roar: to explore the stream of consciousness, to capture the way we make sense of experience and order out of our memory’s chaos. Readings in George Eliot, Henry James, Virginia Woolf and others.
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