Excerpt for the following discussion:
“Oh, how cruel!” said Dorothea, clasping her hands. “And would you not like to be the one person who believed in that man’s innocence, if the rest of the world belied him? Besides, there is a man’s character beforehand to speak for him.”
“But, my dear Mrs. Casaubon,” said Mr. Farebrother, smiling gently at her ardour, “character is not cut in marble—it is not something solid and unalterable. It is something living and changing, and may become diseased as our bodies do.”
Question: Referring to Virginia Woof’s concerns about the modernization of the novel, in what ways, or is Middlemarch is progressive or regressive?
To answer this question, we can start looking at Woof’s major question: what defines modern literature? She took reference to Fielding and Jane Austen, the two renowned authors of the novel, whose works lay a simplistic...
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