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Scott treats similar themes to some of his earlier novels, like Rob Roy and The Heart of Midlothian, examining the conflict between heroic ideals and modern society.
In the latter novels, industrial society becomes the center of this conflict as the backward Scottish nationalists and the " advanced " English have to arise from chaos to create unity.
Similarly, the Normans in Ivanhoe, who represent a more sophisticated culture, and the Saxons, who are poor, disenfranchised, and resentful of Norman rule, band together and begin to mold themselves into one people.
The conflict between the Saxons and Normans focuses on the losses both groups must experience before they can be reconciled and thus create a united England.
The particular loss is in the extremes of their own cultural values, which must be disavowed in order for the society to function.
For the Saxons, this value is the final admittance of the hopelessness of the Saxon cause.
The Normans must learn to overcome the materialism and violence in their own codes of chivalry.
Ivanhoe and Richard represent the hope of reconciliation for a unified future.

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