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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260409T210039Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20251203T160000
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20251203T170000
SUMMARY:ECLS Research Seminar: Causation in The Mill on the Floss
TZID:Europe/London
UID:20251203-8ac672c69a9158c4019aa708f5a362ba@warwick.ac.uk
CREATED:20251121T153015Z
DESCRIPTION:Faculty of Arts colleagues and students are warmly invited to
  come along to a forthcoming Department of English and Comparative Liter
 ary Studies research seminar. The research seminar will take place in th
 e Student Hub (FAB5.49). Drinks and nibbles are provided. Wednesday 3 De
 cember\, 4pm\, FAB5.49: Causation in The Mill on the Floss Dr Andrea Sel
 leri George Eliot’s second novel was published in 1860\, at a time when 
 the author was intensely engaged with the relationship between abstract 
 theoretical topics and people’s everyday lives. In this talk I aim to dr
 aw attention to one philosophical problem with which Eliot seems to have
  been especially preoccupied while writing this novel\, and whose influe
 nce can be seen both at the macroscopic level of plot and at the local l
 evels of characterisation and narratorial commentary. The problem in que
 stion is that of causation\, and its novelistic corollary is the questio
 n of how it operates in people’s lives. Of course\, at some level\, any 
 story must engage with causation\, in the sense of presupposing some log
 ic for the events of its plot\; but in The Mill on the Floss\, I will ar
 gue\, there is a quasi-systematic attempt on Eliot’s part to transcend t
 he classic novelistic paradigm of “motivation” and replace it with a mor
 e capacious set of considerations about how people’s conscious reasons f
 or their actions are embedded in a complex tissue of supra-personal fact
 ors. These include historical and economic considerations\, but also an 
 element of randomness. By situating Eliot’s engagement with causation wi
 thin a seldom considered British nineteenth-century philosophical tradit
 ion concerned with the free will vs. determinism debate\, and in particu
 lar by considering the influence of philosopher Charles Bray’s “incompat
 ibilism”\, I hope to provide a rationale for some of the features of Eli
 ot’s novel\, e.g. the oft-noticed oddity of its ending. Dr Andrea Seller
 i has worked in the Department of English Language and Literature at Bil
 kent University in Ankara\, and at the University of Warwick\, where he 
 completed his PhD in 2014. His research is mostly concerned with the rel
 ations between Victorian literature\, criticism and philosophy. His work
  has appeared in the Review of English Studies\, Victorian Periodicals R
 eview\, Victorian Literature and Culture\, English Literary History\, Ph
 ilosophy and Literature\, and Notes and Queries. He is the editor of the
  third volume of the Routledge series Literature and Philosophy in Ninet
 eenth-Century British Culture. Best wishes\, Dr Steve Purcell Director o
 f Research\, English and Comparative Literary Studies
LOCATION:FAB5.49
CATEGORIES:Seminar
LAST-MODIFIED:20251121T153015Z
ORGANIZER;CN=Sue Rae:
END:VEVENT
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