McKenzie, Keith Alexander, and Gordon S. Haight. Edith Simcox and George Eliot. Oxford University Press, 1961.
58
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Edith J. Simcox | Much of EJS
's writing was influenced by John Stuart Mill
, Jeremy Bentham
, and Auguste Comte
. She wrote for a range of publications including the Contemporary Review, the North British Review... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Edith J. Simcox | The work was, according to her biographer, a statement of the scientific rationalist's ethical position. McKenzie, Keith Alexander, and Gordon S. Haight. Edith Simcox and George Eliot. Oxford University Press, 1961. 58 |
Literary responses | Teresia Constantia Phillips | Critic Lynda M. Thompson
argues that TCP
and Laetitia Pilkington
(her close predecessor in publication, regularly linked with her in contemporary gossip) were doing something quite new in revealing their transgressive sex lives and blaming... |
Literary Setting | Angela Carter | Fevvers was hatched from an egg and raised in a brothel, and sold herself into slavery to help her foster family. With the touring circus, she migrates from London to the Siberian wilderness (it turns... |
politics | Sarah Austin | Parental influences inclined both SA
and her husband towards radicalism and ultra-Liberal opinions. qtd. in Hamburger, Lotte, and Joseph Hamburger. Troubled Lives: John and Sarah Austin. University of Toronto Press, 1985. 26 |
politics | Anna Wheeler | Once established in London by the mid 1820s, AW
moved among the socialist intelligentsia, choosing as her associates Jeremy Bentham
, whom she claimed to [adore] as a philosopher and [love] as a friend, qtd. in Kelly, Gary, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 158. Gale Research, 1996. 350 |
Residence | Sarah Austin | After they were married, the couple moved to No. 1 Queen Square, Westminster; their neighbours included Mill
and Bentham
. Ross, Janet. Three Generations of Englishwomen. John Murray, 1888, 2 vols. 35 |
Textual Features | John Stuart Mill | The creed or philosophy of Utilitarianism held that human actions ought to be directed towards (in the well-known phrase of Jeremy Bentham
) the greatest happiness of the greatest number. Mill argued that utility is... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Charles Dickens | Hard Times is also an attack on Bentham
ite Utilitarianism. |
Travel | John Stuart Mill | In 1820 and 1821 he spent time studying in France with Bentham
's brother Samuel
. Mill, John Stuart, and John Jacob Coss. Autobiography. Columbia University Press, 1924. vii, 39 |
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