Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Hardy, Thomas (1840-1928). Hardy, Thomas (1840-1928)'
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Hamil, Mustapha. "The Structural basis of Hardy's imaginative universe in "The Mayor of Casterbridge" and "Tess of the d'Urbervilles"." Lille 3 : ANRT, 1986. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37598204x.
Full textAHMED, HUSSEIN ALAWIA. "L'amour dans les romans de thomas hardy." Paris 4, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986PA040064.
Full textThis study of love in the novels of thomas hardy is devided mainly in four parts. The first part deals with the feminine presence in hardy's life and its influence on his novels. Since love is mainly presented in the wessex novels in a social context, i briefly managed to deal with the wessex society as far as its influence on the love relations is concerned. As well, i tried to deal with the different love relations before marriage and, of course, hardy's attitudes towards them. The failure of the marriage constitution to organise the immortal puzzle of the sexual relationships between the sexes is dealt with at length in the third part. The different kinds of the game of love, such as presented in hardy's novels, and how in the very nature of these games reside the germs of their failure and tragic ends, constitute the body of the fourth and the last part of this study
Badawi, Muhamad. "Thomas Hardy and the meaning of freedom." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/2691.
Full textTaguiev-Espèce, Patricia. "Poetique du + flux ; dans l'ecriture de thomas hardy." Paris 3, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA030114.
Full textThe main thesis of this study is the existence under the logical discourse of a fluctuating writing, produced by the primacy of the unconscious in what thomas hardy calls +the flow of inventiveness ;. This subterranean writing can be defined as the presence of the author within his text, which incites the reader to consider it not only from the linguistic point of view, but also in an anthropological perspective (as hardy suggests when he valorizes his + living style ;). The writer having a body as well as a mind, hardy's style is analysed in this study from a materialistic viewpoint: the novelist appears to give greater importance to sensation than to meaning in his work, which is rather intuitively felt than intellectualized. For in hardy's opinion, the visionary artist can reach +the deeper reality; thanks to his + spiritual eye ; and to his + mental tactility ;, while +the empirical eye ; can only reach + the scenic reality ;. All the theoretical influences on hardy's thought evoke the +flux;, as the novelist himself seems to confirm when he speaks of+ the general flux of things ; : we specifically refer to the flux of desire (spinoza), the vital flux (herbert spencer's evolutionism), the flux of ideas and perceptions (hume's empiricism), and the flux of the unconscious (hardy's immanent will closely resembles schopenhauer's wille). Such a narrative fluidity requires a close reading, in which the unsaid prevails over the said. The multi-connection between the + absence of styte ; and the + absent-mindedness ; of the hardyan hero is to be traced in the figural richness of the text. His existential pain occasionally reopens his original crack, and triggers off the process of psychic dissociation. Then the hero leaves the real world, and is completely dispersed into his environment. In order to prevent the total destruction of his body image, he amalgamates himself with a percept which + sensorializes ; him, and thereby enables him to regain his consistency. If the hero's psychic crack prompts him to dissolve himself into the outside, the writer's creative power must also prompt him to dissolve his being into his style, since we admit with gilles deleuze that + writing has no other function than to be a flux which combines with other flux
HERVOCHE, BERTHO BRIGITTE. "L'amour et la mort dans les romans de thomas hardy (1840-1928)." Lyon 2, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990LYO20048.
Full textIn hardy's novels the collusion of love and death is revealed by the cruelty of pagan love (eros), which hides the dualism of human psyche and the victorian split of body and spirit, and by christian love itself (agape) - though generous and apparently less deadly than eros- that implies self-sacrifice whose fatal character hardy denounces in his parody of the myths of the fall and crucifixion. The complmentarity of eros and agape is expressed in a painful initiation which goes beyond a mere praise of the return to an order compromised by the excesses of eros and beyond a mere submission to victorian ethics and the victorian literary conventions of "happy ending". It is a sincere attempt at reconciliation of pagan love and christian love, the expression of hardy's faith in a happy marriage and also a victory -even temporary- of love over death. Looking for a meaning to give to love and death, hardy adopts a stategy of challenge and freedom as he chooses to swerve from the myths of the androgyne and arthurian romance. His demythification of the desire for androgynous fusion, of the quest for erotic transcendence and of the divinisation of the loved one -which result in failure and hide a secret desire for death- is a questioning of any mythical or metaphysical dimension of love whatsoever
Howard, Laura Lynn. "The nature of Thomas Hardy's walls." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/23067.
Full textTiefer, Hillary Ann. "The natural and the cultivated in the novels of Thomas Hardy." Thesis, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.683149.
Full textSenechal, Janie. "Stratégies énonciatives et pratiques narratives chez Thomas Hardy : à partir de l'étude de deux romans : Far from the madding crowd et The woodlanders." Lille3, 1985. http://www.theses.fr/1985LIL30013.
Full textGoater, Thierry. "Figures de l'aliénation dans les "romans de caractère et d'environnement" de Thomas Hardy." Rennes 2, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000REN20023.
Full textThomas Hardy's fictional work has long been excluded from the " canon " of English literature. It has indeed confronted and still confronts critics with numerous ideological and aesthetic problems. The liberal,humanist and realist surface of the novelist's texts turns out to be disrupted by a gloomy and absurdist vision of existence and by formal discrepancies. The aim of this study is not to try to tone down the pessimism of the work or to explain away its inconsistencies but, on the contrary, to highlight them, to underline the central role played by the theme of alienation in the " Novels of character and environment ", precisely, by putting into perspective its various expressions and eventually by drawing attention to the parallels between the intra- and extra-diegetic levels. The author undermines the myth of a sovereign and unitary subject : characters in his novels and short stories are exiled, decentred, threatened with fragmentation and dissolution through external and internal forces. Representation alienates its own discourse by exhibiting its divisions and aporias. Hardy heralds a form of modernity, namely the crisis of mimesis. New modes of reception for literary works are thus involved : the reading subject is no longer a passive consumer of the text but must turn into an active producer
Bernard, Stéphanie Paccaud-Huguet Josiane. "De Thomas Hardy à Joseph Conrad vers une écriture de la modernité /." Lyon : Université Lumière Lyon 2, 2004. http://demeter.univ-lyon2.fr:8080/sdx/theses/lyon2/2004/vallon_s.
Full textCordon, Peggy. "Thomas Hardy et l'expérimentation générique : Desperate remedies, The return of the native et A laodicean." Paris 7, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA070037.
Full textThomas Hardy's genre experimentation in Desperate Remedies (1871), The Return ofthe Native (1878) and A Laodicean (1881) mirrors the way the writer succeeds in differing from other voices in literature through the prism of a highly normative System. The three novels thus represent different steps in the generic evolution of the author's work during the first ten years of his literary career. The three novels are subject to several influences. The editorial pressure and the context of the monthly parts in magazines have a great impact on the generic orientation of the text. The author also seeks recognition and therefore follows in other famous writers' footsteps. This process of digestion and absorption of the literary tradition leaves traces in the novels. Yet, rewriting allows Hardy to appropriate tradition with the benefit of hindsight all along the subsequent editions of his works. The discrepancies with the literary tradition are also illustrated by generic multiplicity and interaction in the three novels which renew our vision of the genres Hardy uses. The idea of the novels as patchworks triggers a process of "defamiliarization" through diverse genre combinations. Thomas Hardy offers a fragmentary mode of writing, enabling him to break free from literary conventions. Nevertheless, the numerous genres he uses convey clashing concepts, structures, and themes. The coexistence of genres sometimes threatens the unity of thé novels. A way of writing which oversteps the generic norms, characterised by Hardy's poetics of excess, allows the patchwork to cohere and defines the nature of the dialogue between Hardy's novels and the literary texts belonging to the past
Bernard, Stéphanie. "De Thomas Hardy à Joseph Conrad : vers une écriture de la modernité." Lyon 2, 2004. http://theses.univ-lyon2.fr/documents/lyon2/2004/vallon_s.
Full textThomas Hardy is usually considered a Victorian writer. Nonetheless, his last novel entitled Jude the Obscure announced the era of modernity which started with the twentieth century, just before he abandoned fiction to become a poet, while Joseph Conrad was writing that deep-resounding novel entitled Lord Jim. With rising modernity in the background, it appears that their works allowed for the rewriting of tragedy, now revived as the tragic. Tess of the D'Urbervilles, whose tone may sound pastoral, recalls traditional Greek tragedies. In Jude the Obscure, urban settings have replaced the countryside, and society has definitely been substituted for the gods. Such a defeat of the divine is brought even further with Conrad : in Lord Jim, the romantic undertones are incessantly balanced by the explosion of the conventions of representation; the modern age is clearly perceptible in the white and cold landscapes of Under Western Eyes. These four novels, through their similarities and differences, show how modernity operates on genres and old forms of writing by regenerating them. The tragic as a style uses the letter the better to shatter it : so it does when the voice of the poet can be heard through the murmurs of Jude's imagination, or when unspeakable truth comes close to the horror and startles the Western reader of the Conradian text
Canton, Licia 1963. "The fate of the fallen woman in George Eliot and Thomas Hardy /." Thesis, McGill University, 1986. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=65544.
Full textCoulibaly, Oumar. "Les tensions du récit dans les nouvelles de Thomas Hardy." Montpellier 3, 1985. http://www.theses.fr/1985MON30061.
Full textDillion, Jacqueline M. "Thomas Hardy : folklore and resistance." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/5156.
Full textBantz, Nathalie. "Les Nouvelles de Thomas Hardy. Choix stratégiques d’une écriture sous contrainte." Thesis, Nancy 2, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009NAN21005/document.
Full textThomas Hardy wanted to be remembered as a poet. His reputation, however, was built on his novels. In light of this, his short stories, both different from, and similar to, his novels and his poetry stylistically, offer a unique perspective on his writing as a whole. Accordingly, the purpose of this thesis is to study the choices the author made as regards the narrator’s posture and discourse. It ultimately aims at understanding how the short stories, long neglected and only quite recently brought into a new light by Kristin Brady’s The Short Stories of Thomas Hardy. Tales of Past and Present (1982) and Martin Ray’s A Textual History of Hardy’s Short Stories (1997), fit into the complete body of Hardy’s works. Analyses permitted by Gérard Genette’s theory of narratology and the French enunciation theory reveal that an overall strategy governs all the choices pertaining to the narrator, and that any contradictory or ambivalent sign is just part and parcel of that general scheme: to tell a story while offering the reader a snapshot of what Hardy called « the relation of the sexes ». Given the requirements that fiction, and more particularly the novel, had to meet in Victorian times, such a plan appears doomed to fail, were it not for the elbow room enabled by the short story, then a nascent genre. In the course of the study, Hardy’s short stories emerge as a middle ground between his novels and his poems in terms of the various narrative strategies they make it possible for the author to develop. By comparison, the novel is at that time far too coded as a genre to allow such liberties, and poetry is a completely free ground where Hardy can « express more fully […] ideas and emotions which run counter to the inert crystallized opinion ».2 Eventually, the short stories appear an essential part of Hardy’s works, on equal terms with his novels and his poems. They shed bright light on the reason why Hardy decided to put an end to his career as a novelist whereas he went on writing short fiction until the turn of the century. They also make it clear in what sense only poetry could fit what he wanted to accomplish both as a storyteller and as an observer of the society of his time. Last but not least, the short stories offer a rare opportunity to look closer to the figure which lies behind what we call « the author-in-the-text »
Gadoin, Isabelle. "Construction de l'espace fictif dans les "Romans de caractère et d'environnement" de Thomas Hardy : Espace représenté et espace représentant." Paris 3, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993PA030112.
Full textEstanove, Laurence. "La poésie de Thomas Hardy : une dynamique de la désillusion." Toulouse 2, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008TOU20059.
Full textBecause of the grandeur and popularity of his novels, Thomas Hardy's poetry is often disregarded; yet paying due attention to his verse is also central, if not fundamental, to the understanding of the workings of his multifaceted writing. The dark irony which is so characteristic of his prose also colours his poetry, and even gives it strength and cohesion: in the semi-fictional land of Wessex that shapes both novels and poems, the fatally disappointing shift from dreams to reality actually builds up the dynamics of disillusionment, between hope and failure. In that seemingly paradoxical idea of an active form of disenchantment, of a violent awakening of consciousness both painful and enlightening, Hardy shows his commitment to the concerns of his time, depicting as he does the “ache of modernism” that the rise of science and decline of faith created. His poetry of disillusionment thus offers an immediate illustration of the major ideological and socio-cultural turmoil which accompanied in Europe the transition from the nineteenth to the twentieth century – a transition shaping the very texture of his poetic language, between tradition and modernity
Pedersen, Susan. "From dissent to diselief : Gaskell, Hardy, and the development of the English social realist novel." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/21605.
Full textAs 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.
Lemardelé, Gildas. "Représentations diaboliques et infernales dans les romans de Thomas Hardy : emprunts et métamorphoses." Caen, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013CAEN1700.
Full textAlthough Thomas Hardy’s early prose fiction (notably Under the Greenwood Tree, 1872, and Far From the Madding Crowd, 1874) has often been perceived in a pastoral light, it contains the germs of infernal and diabolical images. These became manifest in The Return of the Native (1878); and in Tess of the d’Urbervilles (1891) they took on a structural influence. The contribution of this thesis lies in relating the diabolical representations with the numerous issues resulting from the cultural and intellectual upheavals that marked the late nineteenth century. This study first focuses on Hardy’s rewritings of the literary myth of the Devil, and then goes on to suggest possible meanings for these diabolical and infernal representations. Such representations include a religious dimension: the diabolical is used to express a form of anti-Christian sentiment, which overturns traditional theological elements. As to their mythical content, it implies a symbolic interpretation of the mysteries of evil and chaos in the world: the influences, among others, of Darwinism and pessimism, as well as the conflict between science and the Christian faith transpire through the cosmological dimension of these diabolical representations
He, Donghui. "Reconstructions of the rural homeland in novels by Thomas Hardy, Shen Congwen and Mo Yan." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2000. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/NQ48645.pdf.
Full textDolph, Annette R. "Forces of nature in the naturalistic novel : Dreiser and Hardy." Virtual Press, 2006. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1337192.
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Alexander, Elizabeth Chenoweth. "Alcoholism and the Family: The Destructive Forces in Hardy's Tess of the D'urbervilles." Thesis, University of North Texas, 1992. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500856/.
Full textKandji, Mamadou. "Roman anglais et traditions populaires de Walter Scott à Thomas Hardy." Rouen, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988ROUEL047.
Full textAgarian popular culture is an important component of the nineteenth-century english novel. This thesis is an attempt to map out the manifestations of customs, beliefs and popular superstitions, in the english novel, from Walter Scott to Thomas Hardy. The first chapter of this dessertation deals with the cultural heritage. Next, follow the chapters on Scott, Emily, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot and finally, Hardy who availed themselves of the popular culture they had known and observed, in order to give substance and depth to their fiction. Scott taps the customs, beliefs, of the scottish highlands aiming, in so doing, at the rivival of ancient popular culture. Whereas the Brontë sisters approach it differently. Charlotte is more sensitive to fantasay, fantasmagoria and mental issues ; Emily deals with the supernatural germane to the ballad tradition (fairies, ghost-lores, witchcraft and demonology). The second part of the dissertation reviews George Eliot and Hardy as regional novelists who explore the folklore and local customs of their respective midlands and dorsetshire. In george eliot's treatment, satire and irony take the lead over romanticism. In Hardy’s works one can observe the richness and depth of dorsetshire folklore : popular feasts, fair-grounds, superstitions, and sundry customs and beliefs are handled vividly. As a conclusion, the thesis states that the rise of the english novel is closely related to the genesis of folklore scholarship and popular culture
Lopes, Christiane Maria. "A mulher na era vitoriana." reponame:Repositório Institucional da UFPR, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1884/24338.
Full textCornon, Stéphanie. "La résurgence de la littérature médiévale et la représentation de l'imaginaire celte dans les oeuvres de Philippe Le Guillou et de Thomas Hardy." Paris 3, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA030065.
Full textIn England and in Brittany, literature under the influence of the neighbouring Ireland, still presents reflections of this two country's legendary past. The written production brings out the survival of a Celt imaginary which never disappeared. Fascinated by the timeless atmosphere which reigns in these bastions of Celt legendary, Philippe Le Guillou and Thomas Hardy develop in their works the obsessional components of this imaginary haunted by nightmarish images of destruction and engulfing. However, the Celt spirit can't be defined without its passionate relation with elementary world. The sea and the forest omnipresents in the works of this two writers are used as setting in this work of re-using medieval's themes
Panter, Marie. "Le roman, poème du monde. Victor Hugo, Theodor Fontane, Thomas Hardy." Thesis, Lyon, École normale supérieure, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013ENSL0856.
Full textThis thesis deals with the poetics of the novel in Victor Hugo, Theodor Fontane and Thomas Hardy, with a specific focus on The Man who Laughs (1869), Trials and Tribulations (1888) and Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1891). By bringing together these three novelists who are widely acknowledged as major writers yet ignored by general theories of the novel, this study will show how a vision of the modern novel as a poetic rendition of reality, with an idealist, progressive and critical background, has maintained itself. Hugo, Fontane and Hardy, three novelists who considered themselves to be poets first and foremost, opted to turn the novel into a tragedy, a poetic rendition of reality which stands in contrast with Lukacs’ post-Hegelian theories of the modern novel as a prosaic literary genre. In the face of nihilism and the theories of the realist novel which surfaced in the second half of the XIXth century and attempted to define – in the restrictive sense of the word – the genre of the novel, they turned back to the model of the Romantic novel and reinvented it at a time when the realist novel was preeminent. Their poetics was therefore based on the “poietisation” of prose, in other words, based on the imaginary, the symbolic and the metaphoric. This enabled them to assert the specificity and possibility of a poetic, that is to say subjective, heroic and moral experience of the world, as well as the ability of the novel to generate poetical knowledge about the world and history
Loriaux, Emilie. "Rapports au langage de William Barnes et de Thomas Hardy : poésie et philologie." Thesis, Artois, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016ARTO0002.
Full textThe aim of this thesis is to compare the poetical works of two men born in the South-West of England : Thomas Hardy (1840-1928), more often known as a novelist, and his deep interest in the works of his contemporary, the philologist William Barnes (1801-1886), who also happened to be a poet. In this way, the valuable connection with Barnes, often consigned to oblivion among Hardy scholars, aims at giving more prominence to our subject. A thorough study of Barnes’s Glossary of the Dorset Dialect with a Grammar, as well as his other works in prose is the referential linchpin of our exploration of the latter’s language. Nevertheless, even though those two poets’ lives were deeply embedded in their region, their poetries are not restricted to the Dorset dialect. Our interest also lies in the various language registers and the interface between the (Anglo)-Saxon language and later varieties, which, put together, make up the wealth of English. Given their likely convergences, it seems profitable to see to what extent Barnes’ philological research (including his native dialect) impacted upon Hardy’s poetry, without forgetting to cull examples from the latter’s novels
Laarman, Mathieu. "Fictions du naufrage, Naufragés de la fiction : poétiques du roman de l’échec : (Mary Shelley, Giovanni Verga, Thomas Hardy, Alain-Fournier, Louis Guilloux, Vitaliano Brancati)." Thesis, Paris 10, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA100155/document.
Full textThis study focuses upon a comparison of six works in French, English and Italian from the 19th and 20th centuries, in order to reflect upon the staging of failure in the novel form. Firstly, the study demonstrates how representations of failure are shaped both by the individual development of their authors, and by the social and political tensions of the period through which they lived (England after the French Revolution, and later at the height of the industrial revolution in the Victorian age; Sicily after the Risorgimento, and under Mussolini’s regime; France during the belle époque or the interwar years.)The second part of this thesis aims to highlight three principal aspects of the poetics of the ‘novel of failure’. This section focuses initially on the distribution of time – a temporality which oscillates between the linear and the cyclical, invoking the image of tidal ebbs and flows. Subsequently, the section emphasises the preponderance of weak-willed characters, who aim to decode their relationships to the world through the prism of their naïve and bookish illusions, in the manner of a Dostoyevskian or Flaubertian protagonist. Finally, this section seeks to illuminate the peculiar process that leads characters and objects of fiction to exchange their attributes and functions: while the former find themselves reduced to the level of useless or abandoned objects, the latter achieve an almost autonomous existence.The thesis concludes by engaging with the question of the subversive charge of the ‘novel of failure’. The novel form reveals itself to be endowed with an exceptional capacity for resistance to ideological discourses and mechanisms of socio-cultural control, whose detrimental aspirations it insidiously frustrates
Kane, Bouna. "L'Interculturalité au regard du roman victorien et africain : essai d'analyse des romans de Chinua Achebe et Ngugi wa Thiong'o au miroir de Thomas Hardy et Joseph Conrad." Paris 3, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA030011.
Full textThe study of cultural hybridity in literature remained tied to a theory which defines postcolonial literatures in terms of their oppositional relationship with the West. In this thesis, we attempted to go beyond the “writing back to the center”. We have not ignored the debate over standard criticism but we have chosen to demonstrate by means of this comparative study that the African novel is part of a larger fictional universe. By appropriating the techniques of the Victorian literary tradition associated with Thomas Hardy and Joseph Conrad, African writers create a useful device for developing greater understanding and improved communication among people from different cultural, racial and ethnic groups. We found striking similarities between the Scottish clan and the African tribe in terms of social organisation and way of life. Like Scott and Hardy, Ngugi and Achebe draw the substance of their novels from the folklore and popular traditions of their communities. African and Victorian novelists have a clear awareness of the human predicament and show how fate can be cruel to the individual
Dunsmore, Patricia Berard. "Robert Louis Stevenson and Scotland: A most complicated relationship." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1991. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/847.
Full textBell, Susan. "Verse into Song Composers and their settings of poems by Thomas Hardy: 1893 - 1928." Thesis, Loughborough University, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.492734.
Full textOestreich, Kate Faber. "Fashioning Chastity: British Marriage Plots and the Tailoring of Desire, 1789-1928." The Ohio State University, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1216224246.
Full textSilva, Isaías Eliseu da [UNESP]. "A dramatização da crise dos valores sociais e humanos em Tess of the d'Urbervilles, de Thomas Hardy." Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/91527.
Full textCoordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
Thomas Hardy é um autor cuja produção se assenta no período que compreende o final do século XIX e o começo do século XX, momento que marca não apenas o fim de uma era histórica e o recomeço de novos tempos, mas caracteriza também uma ocasião de mudança na concepção literária. No caso inglês, aquele período apontava para um declínio da literatura vitoriana – com seus temas baseados na moral austera da época, ancorada na figura íntegra da rainha Vitória – e revelava os primeiros indícios de uma tendência literária voltada para o retrato do homem cindido, imerso no processo de crise existencial e destituído de muitas de suas antigas certezas. Este trabalho apresenta uma análise do romance Tess of the d‟Urbervilles com vistas a flagrar, segundo o ponto de vista de Thomas Hardy, a crise de valores que se estabelece, quando o modo de produção capitalista avança sobre as antigas instituições feudais na Inglaterra daquele tempo e deflagra um processo de reconsideração dos papéis dos indivíduos na sociedade. O estopim desta efervescência foram os desdobramentos da Revolução Industrial e as inovações nos campos científico e cultural que convulsionaram os padrões de comportamento e colocaram em questionamento a própria conduta humana. Com ironia, a sociedade vitoriana é criticada e, seus costumes, em grande monta, são apresentados como hipócritas no romance de Hardy, que tem um desfecho fatalista e parece retratar a visão desencantada do homem daquele momento sobre o destino de sua própria espécie no mundo em ascendente ebulição. Publicado pela primeira vez em 1891 e concebido sob a forma realista, interessa à pesquisa o romance Tess of the d‟Urbervilles justamente pelo seu caráter duplo: pertence ao cânone da literatura vitoriana e, ao mesmo tempo, antecipa a temática modernista do colapso da solidez humana. Para apontar esta crise, adotamos...
Thomas Hardy‟s works are set in a time comprehending the end of nineteenth century and the beginning of twentieth century, a period that not only highlights the end of a historical era and the beginning of a new time, but also characterizes an occasion of change in literary conception. That period in England was representative of the decay of Victorian literature – with moral-based themes inspired in Queen Victoria‟s integrity – and it showed up the first signs of a literary tendency of revealing the image of the divided man, sunk into the process of existential crisis and void of many of his previous certainties. This study presents an examination on Tess of the d‟Urbervilles in order to depict, according to Thomas Hardy‟s point of view, the crisis of values installed in the social order, when capitalism advances over the old feudal institutions in England at that time and sets forth a process of reconsideration of the roles of the individuals in society. The starting point of all this effervescence was the Industrial Revolution and its implications that brought innovation to scientific and cultural realms, disrupting old standards of behaviour and putting human conduct in check. The Victorian society is criticized with irony and many of its habits are taken as hypocrisies in Hardy‟s novel, which ends fatalistically, seeming to portrait man‟s disappointed view about his own destiny in the disturbed world in that time. Tess of the d‟Urbervilles, written under the realist form, was published for the first time in 1891 and it is important to this research because of its double character: it belongs to the canon of Victorian literature and, at the same time, anticipates the modernist theme of the collapse of human solidity. To point out this crisis, we take Raymond Williams‟s position that considers Hardy not simply a regionalist writer exclusively worried with... (Complete abstract click electronic access below)
Biggs, David J. (David John). "The piping of the shepherd : meaning as myth in the pastoral novels of Thomas Hardy." 1988. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09ARM/09armb592.pdf.
Full textStotko, Mary-Ann. "Victorian agnosticism: Thomas Hardy's doomed universe." Thesis, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1285.
Full textEnglish Studies
M.A. (English)
De, Klerk Hannelie. "Intertextuality in John Fowles's The French lieutenant's woman." Thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10210/10788.
Full textQuatro, Michael Angelo. ""The sleep of the spinning top" : masculinity, labor, and subjectivity in Thomas Hardy's Jude the obscure." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3288.
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Gibson, Lindsay Gail. "Luminous Pasts: Artificial Light and the Novel, 1770-1930." Thesis, 2016. https://doi.org/10.7916/D8Z89CDT.
Full textSmallwood, Christine. "Depressive Realism: Readings in the Victorian Novel." Thesis, 2014. https://doi.org/10.7916/D88W3BXV.
Full textIssany, Tanzeelah Banu Mamode Ismael. "Bursting out of the corset: physical mobility as social transgression and subversion in Thomas Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles." Diss., 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1066.
Full textEnglish Studies
M.A. (English)