Friday, October 18, 2013

Character Analysis by Henry James

The contemporary reviews of from the back of our copies of Middlemarch contain 
various articles which examine the book and George Eliot's techniques. But to be 
honest I only read a few. I didn't want to anymore. After reading Henry James' 
review titled, "George Eliot's Middlemarch," I didn't want to read anymore. I 
enjoyed it enough that I knew this what what I wanted to write about.

Right from when we started reading Middlemarch, we knew that it would get 
difficult to keep the characters straight. Sure, now that we've read most, if 
not all, of the book we know the characters better. We know the story. We know 
enough to say we notice the absence of a character and wonder when we'll come 
around to their part of the story again. And this is what Henry James talked 
about and that's what I appreciated most. With Mary Barton, there was 
discussion of who the main character really was. Henry James addressed this 
problem with an even greater character list!

James' review opens with the best line! "Middlemarch is at once one of the 
strongest and one of the weakest of English novels." James talks about Eliot's 
range of characters. He speaks best of Dorothea claiming she is the subject of 
the book "a young girl framed for a moral life than circumstance often affords, 
yearning for a motive for sustained spiritual effort and only wasting her ardor 
and soiling her wings against the meanness of opportunity." Dorothea is made out 
to have the "career of an obscure St. Theresa." However while James goes on to 
praise Dorothea as great and genuine creation, he laments that she is not the 
only character to be focused on. She is just a small part, just a part of an 
episode. Other people's relationships become the focus. But James can't help but 
go on about how Dorothea was too superb a heroine to be wasted" especially when 
she loses facetime to the likes of Fred Vincy. But if it's Lydgate, it's 
different. Because Lydgate is a hero as much as Dorothea is...while Ladislaw is 
only a "beautiful attempt." James seems to only wish that Lydgate and Dorothea 
interacted more often because being brought into contact suggests a "wealth of 
dramatic possibility between them." But James acknowledges that if they had, the 
character of Rosamond would've been lost.

Basically, what was awesome about Henry James' review is the way he analyzes 
every character. To truly summarize and analyze the review is merely to copy and 
paste it into the blog. Because what James is really all about is analyzing the 
way the characters interact and the role they play in each other's character 
development. This allows for Eliot's psychological presentation into society.

James claims "the author has desired to be strictly real and to adhere to the 
facts of the common lot..." and had thus presented us with human drama. With 
characters like Dorothea and Lydgate, do you agree?

3 comments:

  1. Hey Sarah, I thought the first line of James' review was the best line too! it really opened my eyes to the weak areas of Middlemarch that I didn't recognize before and helped me be less annoyed at the rest of the reviews. The way he broke down the chemistry of the characters was also very helpful and brilliant. He really gets in there and expands on the "variety of the human life under aspects apparently similar..." So, I agree that James' presentation of the human drama that Eliot illustrates to connect the realness of those relationships, help illuminate and link other characters and their role within Middlemarch.

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  2. James also felt the novel was too didactic, despite the genius in its presentation, characterization and organization. To him, Eliot had a heavy-handed moral agenda in writing the book.

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  3. I like James' criticism, in general (and he was quite a critic!). His novels, in ways, remind me of Eliot's, in that both are highly descriptive. Like Eliot, James takes his time to draw and develop his characters, plot, and setting.

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