George Eliot and Money: Economics, Ethics and Literature (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture)
Cambridge University Press, 4/24/2014
EAN 9781107057210, ISBN10: 1107057213
Hardcover, 240 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm
Language: English
Unlike other Victorian novelists George Eliot rarely incorporated stock market speculation and fraud into her plots, but meditations on money, finance and economics, in relation both to individual ethics and to wider social implications, infuse her novels. This volume examines Eliot's understanding of money and economics, its bearing on her moral and political thought, and the ways in which she incorporated that thought into her novels. It offers a detailed account of Eliot's intellectual engagements with political economy, utilitarianism, and the new liberalism of the 1870s, and also her practical dealings with money through her management of household and business finances and, in later years, her considerable investments in stocks and shares. In a wider context, it presents a detailed study of the ethics of economics in nineteenth-century England, tracing the often uncomfortable relationship between morality and economic utility experienced by intellectuals of the period.
Introduction
1. 'A subject of which I know so little'
George Eliot and political economy
2. 'Intentions of stern thrift'
the formation of a vernacular economics
3. 'A money-getting profession'
negotiating the commerce of literature
4. Calculating consequences
Felix Holt and the limits of utilitarianism
5. Testing the Kantian pillars
debt obligations and financial imperatives in Middlemarch
6. Being good and doing good with money
incorporating the bourgeois virtues
7. The individual and the State
economic sociology in Romola
8. The politics of wealth
new liberalism and the pathologies of economic individualism
Appendix A. George Eliot's final stock portfolio, 1880
Appendix B. Was Edward Tulliver made bankrupt? An analysis of his financial downfall
Bibliography.