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"The sleep of the spinning top" : masculinity, labor, and subjectivity in Thomas Hardy's Jude the obscureQuatro, Michael Angelo 25 July 2011 (has links)
This paper explores and interrogates late Victorian anxieties concerning the issues of masculinity and labor, taking Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure as a key text in this discourse. I argue that Hardy, drawing upon his own experiences, offers a meditation on the differing Victorian modes of masculinity outlined and embodied in the thought of John Henry Newman and Thomas Carlyle, and in doing so, constructs a dialectical tension between already outmoded, yet remarkably persistent, answers to the questions and pressures of modernity. Through the use of one of the text’s central images—that of Christminster and its accompanying Gothic architecture—Hardy creates an opposition between an idealized intellectual labor and the earthy reality of manual labor. Both forms—figured in either the heroic and organic terms of Carlyle or the reserved, tradition-bound reaction of Newman—represent the ideal that allows Jude to live, but also the force that leads to his death. Therefore, in the clash between the ideal and real, the dialectic fails to deliver a possible synthesis, and instead spirals restlessly in the darkened gaps of self-negation. At the same time, because the specter of a crude social and biological Darwinism consciously haunts the edges of the story, the dialectic never stops demanding a synthesis if Jude is to discover the grounding for a fully integrated identity or ethics. The central question for Hardy thus becomes one of form: For a modern masculine subjectivity to take hold, external social forms must have a connective vitality with interior dispositions, a proposition that Hardy views as a near impossibility. / text
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A mulher na era vitorianaLopes, Christiane Maria 06 October 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Alcoholism and the Family: The Destructive Forces in Hardy's Tess of the D'urbervillesAlexander, Elizabeth Chenoweth 12 1900 (has links)
This study examines the forces which shaped the main character--Tess Durbeyfield--in Hardy's novel in terms of the effects which her alcoholic family had upon her mental and emotional potential and which ultimately become the determining factors in her self-destruction. Using the elements and patterns set forth in the literature regarding the dynamics of the alcoholic family, I attempt to show that Hardy's novel may best be understood as the story of a woman whose life and destiny are controlled by the consequences of her father's alcoholism. This interpretation seems to account best for many elements of the novel, such as Tess's destruction, and provides a rich appreciation of Hardy's technique and vision.
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From dissent to diselief : Gaskell, Hardy, and the development of the English social realist novelPedersen, Susan 16 April 2018 (has links)
L’unitarienne Elizabeth Gaskell rejetait les doctrines anglicanes qui aliéneraient Thomas Hardy de sa religion. Elle était aussi championne de plusieurs penseurs qui exerceraient une forte influence sur les convictions d'Hardy. La continuité de la religion de Gaskell avec la vision du monde d'Hardy est évidente dans leurs écritures personnelles et aussi dans leurs romans. L'authenticité de voix que tant Gaskell que Hardy donnent aux caractères marginalisés, et spécialement aux femmes, provient aussi de leurs valeurs chrétiennes communes. Les convictions religieuses des deux auteurs et l'influence de la religion sur leurs travaux ont été abondamment étudiées, mais une comparaison entre elles doit encore être entreprise. Après avoir examiné les liens entre la foi de Gaskell et les convictions d'Hardy, je compare les attitudes des deux auteurs envers la classe dans North and South et The Woodlanders et leurs sympathies envers la femme tombée dans Ruth et Tess of the d’Urbervilles. / As a progressive Unitarian, Elizabeth Gaskell rejected the Anglican doctrines that would later alienate Thomas Hardy from his religion. She also championed many of the thinkers who would exert a strong influence on Hardy’s beliefs. The connection between Gaskell’s religion and Hardy’s worldview is evident in their personal writings and in their novels. The authenticity of voice that both Gaskell and Hardy give to marginalized characters, specifically to women, also springs from their common Christian-based values. Both authors’ religious convictions and the influence of religion on their works have been extensively studied, but a comparison between them has yet to be undertaken. After examining the links between Gaskell’s Unitarianism and Hardy’s beliefs, I compare the two authors’ attitudes towards class in North and South and The Woodlanders and their sympathies with the fallen woman as expressed in Ruth and Tess of the d’Urbervilles to demonstrate their intellectual and artistic affinities.
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The Decay of Romanticism in the Poetry of Thomas HardyWartes, Carolynn L. 12 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that the concept of a godless universe governed by a consciousless and conscienceless Immanent Will in Hardy's poetry is an ineluctable outcome, given the expanded scientific knowledge of the nineteenth century, of the pantheistic views of the English Romantic poets. The purpose is accomplished by tracing characteristically Romantic attitudes through the representative poetry of the early Victorian period and in Hardy's poetry.
The first chapter is a brief introduction. Chapter II surveys major Romantic themes, illustrating them in Wordsworth's poetry. Chapter III treats the decline of the Romantic vision in the poetry of Tennyson and Arnold. Hardy's views and the Victorian poets' influence are the subject of Chapter IV. Chapter V demonstrates Wordsworth's influence on Hardy in several areas.
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A Stylistic Analysis of a Young Man's Exhortation, Opus 14, by Gerald Finzi to Words by Thomas HardyRogers, Carl Stanton 08 1900 (has links)
This song cycle consists of ten settings, and has been divided into two parts by the composer. Each part is preceded by a short quotation in Latin which has been inserted by the composer. The two parts of the cycle are evidently meant to typify the division of a human life into the periods of youth and old age. The Latin quotations which divide the cycle into its two parts are taken from the Latin Vulgate version of the Bible, Psalm 89, verse six.
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Depressive Realism: Readings in the Victorian NovelSmallwood, Christine January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation makes two arguments: First, it elaborates a depressive genealogy of the Victorian novel that asserts a category of realism rooted in affect rather than period or place. Second, it argues for a critical strategy called "depressive reading" that has unique purchase on this literary history. Drawing on Melanie Klein's "depressive position," the project asserts an alternative to novel theories that are rooted in sympathy and desire. By being attentive to mood and critical disposition, depressive reading homes in on the barely-contained negativities of realism. Through readings of novels by William Makepeace Thackeray, Anthony Trollope, Thomas Hardy, and Charlotte Brontë, it explores feelings of ambivalence, soreness, and dislike as aesthetic responses and interpretations, as well as prompts to varieties of non-instrumentalist ethics. In the final chapter, the psychological and literary strategy of play emerges as a creative and scholarly possibility.
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Luminous Pasts: Artificial Light and the Novel, 1770-1930Gibson, Lindsay Gail January 2016 (has links)
Over the course of the nineteenth century, gaslight supplanted the candles and oil lamps that had brightened Europe and America for centuries, and, by 1900, electricity would attain decisive dominance over both. In their narrative figurations of lighting, however, novels of the same period often arrest this march of progress, lingering in an Arcadian past organized around the rhythms of the solar day and the agricultural year. Mining works by Frances Burney, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, Marcel Proust, and others, my dissertation argues that novelists employ obsolete lighting technologies not merely to provide historical texture, but to express narrative impulses that run counter to the realist mode, to dramatize transgressive forms of ambition within the rural communities they depict, and sometimes even to voice ambivalence about the commercial constraints of the serial form. Characters in these novels who avail themselves of artificial illumination alter the rhythm of the workday in order to satisfy desires inconsistent with the interests and pursuits sanctioned by their neighbors: by the light of lamps and candles, they pursue cross-class romance, literary aspirations, or professional goals that fall outside the parameters dictated by social class and the historical moment. For Proust’s narrator, this entails a series of adjustments to his evening schedule over the course of the Recherche, first to accommodate an aristocratic social calendar, and, later, to facilitate the nocturnal composition of his own novel. In Eliot’s case, the inclination to stay awake after nightfall—whether the illicit romantic fantasies of a Hetty Sorrel or the workmanlike resolve of an Adam Bede—constitutes a meaningful challenge to the author’s narrative realism. By examining the formal innovations these technologies provoke in nineteenth-century fiction, my research unearths a pervasive counter-realist tendency in novels often famed for their fidelity to the protocols of realist representation.
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Reconstructions of the rural homeland in novels by Thomas Hardy, Shen Congwen, and Mo YanHe, Donghui 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis studies fictional narratives of the countryside by writers of rural origin in
English and Chinese literature in relation to the "countryside ideal." The term, borrowed from
Michael Bunce, describes an ancient as well as modern theme in literature, which sees the
countryside as a desirable "home." The conventional construction of the countryside by urban
writers sustains this ideal with simplistic and static images. My thesis extends the discussion
beyond the idyllic countryside in the mainstream of Anglo-American culture and the genteel
culture in China to concentrate on Thomas Hardy (1840-1928), Shen Congwen (1902-1988),
and Mo Yan (b. 1956), who all have personal relations with the countryside and who enrich
its image with accounts of actual life, reconnecting it to authentic home place.
I discuss fictional narratives of the rural homelands of the three writers not as
unmediated transcriptions but as cultural constructs, which are shaped by different literary
traditions and responsive to specific historical contexts. My approach is mainly text-based,
but supplemented by references to each writer's cultural and historical contexts. The
Introduction situates these writers and their rural homelands in relation to the specific interest
in the countryside in each writer's cultural milieu. Chapter One reads Hardy's reconstruction of
the countryside in light of the struggle for existence in a Darwinian natural world. Hardy's
sombre-looking rural landscapes highlight the complex difficulties of rural life and the moral
and intellectual qualities required to survive in such a world. Chapter Two studies Shen
Congwen's justification of rural culture in the midst of nationalist aspirations for
globalization. His multi-layered fictionalization of the rural homeland centres on the image
of water, a root symbol of Chinese culture, merging traditional Chinese culture with
modernist vitalism. Chapter three examines Mo Yan's reconstruction of the rural homeland
after the severe disruption of Chinese culture during the Mao era. Mo Yan's magic realist
reconstruction testifies to the repression of the genius loci of his rural homeland by politics
and expresses a desire to be reconnected with the original homeland through sensual bonds
rather than detached observations.
These writers' narratives redefine the countryside in relation to "home" as a centre for
meaningful activities. The fact that they reappropriate and situate rural life and work in
specific cultural traditions and diverse forms of modernity is manifested in their unique and
irreplaceable literary constructions. I will offset Hardy's writing against that of the two
Chinese writers, in order to clarify their rich and diverse cultural implications. Whereas Hardy
subjects his fictional rural landscape to a scientific approach, Shen Congwen reconfirms
traditional Chinese culture, linking it with the ideals of the May Fourth movement for renewal
and revitalization. Mo Yan, for his part, combines the rural perspective and faith in the land
with a modernist use of magic realism. Fictionalizations of the rural homeland thus reveal
complex interactions with modernity.
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Forces of nature in the naturalistic novel : Dreiser and HardyDolph, Annette R. January 2006 (has links)
This study refocuses the current critical discussion of determinism and character identity development in Theodore Dreiser's Sister Carrie, a predominantly "urban" novel, by juxtaposing the ways in which the natural world functions deterministically in Thomas Hardy's The Return of the Native and Theodore Dreiser's The Bulwark. First, a close reading of The Return of the Native suggests that characters' interactions with the natural world determine their identities by forcing shifts in perception and complicating their abilities to assert an identity apart from their environments. Then, a reading of The Bulwark—a novel in which Dreiser deals with the natural world quite directly—allows an exploration of how these same patterns of perception, understanding, and identity formation take shape in a text by Dreiser. The final chapter of this study synthesizes these readings of The Return of the Native and The Bulwark as a means of entry into an analysis of Sister Carrie's deterministic forces. Ultimately, attention to how the natural world influences characters through its timelessness and infinite size, as well as to how the natural world shapes a character's perspective and sense of self, adds to our understanding of the novel's determinism. / Department of English
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