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  1. 1. Jan. 2010 · She treats symbolic conflicts in various areas of culture as an indicator of its contemporary transformation (Hałas 2015), emphasizing the role of reflexive cultural memory (Hałas 2015).

  2. 11. Juni 1992 · George Eliot and the conflict of interpretations articulates the tension, novel by novel, between the writer's suspicion of orthodox creeds and her urgent need to restore values in a sceptical age. Each attempt to break through the conflict of interpretations acknowledges the urgency of the need and the provisional nature of any resolution.

  3. 17. Aug. 2009 · George Eliot and the Conflict of Interpretations - June 1992 Skip to main content Accessibility help We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites.

  4. The Conflict of Interpretations << Previous Article >> Next Article. Already a subscriber or member? Open this document. Not yet a subscriber or member? Subscribe or join here. Access to this document requires a subscription or membership . This document ...

  5. 1. Jan. 2005 · The Conflict of Interpretations ranges across an astonishing diversity of fields: structuralism, linguistics, psychoanalysis, religion and faith. The essays it comprises are bound together by Ricoeur's customary concern for interpretation and language and all bear the stamp of the systematic and critical thinking which has become his hallmark in contemporary philosophy.

  6. In the silence she listens to two voices, two texts which she knows by heart and which speak through her, offering conflicting interpretations of her dilemma. Stephen Guest's letter calls her out of her penance ‘back to life and goodness’, to which in counterpoint she murmurs the words of the Imitation of Christ like a prayer: ‘I have received the Cross’.

  7. 9. März 2006 · George Eliot saw this crisis as one of interpretation, in a vivid, almost apocalyptic awareness that traditional modes of interpreting the world were breaking down irrevocably. This study shows how, in response, she redefined the nature of Victorian fiction, testing to the point of destruction a variety of Victorian myths, orthodoxies and ideologies in each of her novels.

    • David Carroll