ABSTRACT

In George Eliot’s early fiction – the short stories of Scenes of Clerical Life (1857–8) and the novels Adam Bede (1859), The Mill on the Floss (1860) and Silas Marner (1861) – a range of locations serve as landscapes for crafting the ‘rural realism’ that Eliot found to be lacking in many literary and artistic representations of rural spaces. 1 Drawing on the scenes of her early years in Warwickshire and further developed through meticulous research into agricultural life and rural traditions, these works are tightly plotted against sharply observed details of the agricultural landscape – harvest dates, flora and fauna – and enlivened with acute attention to the distinct local dialects and customs that give each rural location its individual characteristics. 2 As critics have often remarked, Eliot’s use of early nineteenth-century settings can at times evoke a romanticized nostalgia for an idyllic pre-Industrial landscape, and despite the intention to better depict the rural working classes, Eliot’s social vision remains limited in scope. 3 Yet at the same time the human interactions that play out in these places are often far from idyllic, demonstrating the moral complexities of socio-cultural ideologies that shape, and are shaped by, the rural locale.