Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel Deronda

Byron's Hebrew Melodies, published in 1815, were written as part of his musical collaboration with the Jewish composer Isaac Nathan. Even though anti-Semitism ran rampant through England during the Romantic period, Byron's Hebrew Melodies remain his most widely respected collection. Despit...

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Main Author: Denise Tischler Millstein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2005-12-01
Series:Forum
Online Access:http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/544
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author_facet Denise Tischler Millstein
author_sort Denise Tischler Millstein
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description Byron's Hebrew Melodies, published in 1815, were written as part of his musical collaboration with the Jewish composer Isaac Nathan. Even though anti-Semitism ran rampant through England during the Romantic period, Byron's Hebrew Melodies remain his most widely respected collection. Despite anti-Semitic prejudice in England during the nineteenth-century, Byron was not the only English writer to take up the Jewish plight as his subject matter. Almost sixty years later, George Eliot would take up a similar set of themes in her novel Daniel Deronda. Significantly, Eliot's novel not only discusses the Jewish desire for a homeland in detail, it does so with numerous, specific references to Byron and his works. Eliot uses both the Jewish plot of Daniel Deronda and Byron as agents to discuss how Victorian England could revive its own national character.
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spelling doaj.art-f71737e5845a4dacadc64a7dc88095692022-12-22T16:26:11ZengUniversity of EdinburghForum1749-97712005-12-010110.2218/forum.01.544544Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel DerondaDenise Tischler Millstein0Louisiana State UniversityByron's Hebrew Melodies, published in 1815, were written as part of his musical collaboration with the Jewish composer Isaac Nathan. Even though anti-Semitism ran rampant through England during the Romantic period, Byron's Hebrew Melodies remain his most widely respected collection. Despite anti-Semitic prejudice in England during the nineteenth-century, Byron was not the only English writer to take up the Jewish plight as his subject matter. Almost sixty years later, George Eliot would take up a similar set of themes in her novel Daniel Deronda. Significantly, Eliot's novel not only discusses the Jewish desire for a homeland in detail, it does so with numerous, specific references to Byron and his works. Eliot uses both the Jewish plot of Daniel Deronda and Byron as agents to discuss how Victorian England could revive its own national character.http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/544
spellingShingle Denise Tischler Millstein
Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel Deronda
Forum
title Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel Deronda
title_full Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel Deronda
title_fullStr Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel Deronda
title_full_unstemmed Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel Deronda
title_short Lord Byron and George Eliot: Embracing National Identity in Daniel Deronda
title_sort lord byron and george eliot embracing national identity in daniel deronda
url http://journals.ed.ac.uk/forum/article/view/544
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