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Sep 26, 2024 · Thomas Hardy, English novelist and poet who set much of his work in Wessex, his name for the counties of southwestern England. His most notable novels include Far from the Madding Crowd, The Return of the Native, The Mayor of Casterbridge, Tess of the d’Ubervilles, and Jude the Obscure.
- Michael Millgate
In short, one is, according to Hardy, powerless to change the workings of Fate, but those things that are contrived by man — social laws and convention, for example — and which work against him can be changed by man.
Hardy's work was criticized as vulgar, but by the late 19th century other experimental fiction works were released such as Florence Dixie's depiction of feminist utopia, The Story of an African Farm by Olive Schreiner, and Sarah Grand's work The Heavenly Twins.
- Thomas Hardy
- 1891
Jun 26, 2019 · Through lucid close readings, the study illuminates key aspects of Hardy’s work, such as the concept of the “Immanent Will,” the manipulation of narrative perspective, love and sexual desire, and “poetic memory.”
Sep 14, 2024 · Once again Hardy created a striking and defining context: his characters live, and in many cases work, in a remote area of woodland, centred on Little Hintock. Their lives and their various struggles are tacitly inter-connected with those of the trees in whose shadow they pass their days.
After suffering the fall and winter at home, Tess is next seen the following August working as a field laborer harvesting corn. We see for the first time that Tess has a baby and stops to breastfeed him during the lunch break the harvesting crew takes. Later that night, the infant falls ill.
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The novel is set in Thomas Hardy's Wessex in rural southwest England, as had been his earlier Under the Greenwood Tree. It deals in themes of love, honour and betrayal, against a backdrop of the seemingly idyllic, but often harsh, realities of a farming community in Victorian England .