
The lifted veil
By George Eliot
Subjects: English Psychological fiction, Psychological fiction, English, Didactic fiction, English, Fiction, general, CHR 1985, English fiction, PRO Gotham Book Mart (former owner) (Gotham Book Mart Collection copy), British and irish fiction (fictional works by one author), Fiction, occult & supernatural, Fiction, psychological, English Didactic fiction
Description: George Eliot's Gothic story, published the same year as her staunchly realist novel, Adam Bede, continues her preoccupation with human communication and sympathy through the figure of the telepathic narrator. Latimer, one of her least likeable characters, suffers tremendously under his heightened awareness of others' petty and selfish thoughts. Latimer chooses to tell the story of his abilities as a tale of disability, a kind of pathography about his gift. The vehemence of his disgust for human frailties suggests that Latimer's pain derives at least in part from his failure of empathy for others (except at his father's death)--that his discomfort with telepathic communication rests on his resistance to human connection in general. Thus, his uncanny hearing unmasks a kind of sympathetic deafness to others, and his progressive heart disease indexes the shriveling of his capacity for human love and friendship.
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