Thomas Hardy's relationship with his audience has always been intense and complex. The controversial subjects that he explored, united with his often demanding experiments in form, provoked his Victorian readers and challenged critics th... R Nemesvari - Palgrave Macmillan UK 被引量: 4发表: 2004...
, Critical Approaches to the Fiction of Thomas Hardy (1979); Dennis Taylor, Hardy’s Poetry, 1860–1928 (1981); Penny Boumelha, Thomas Hardy and Women: Sexual Ideology and Narrative Form (1982); Kristin Brady, The Short Stories of Thomas Hardy (1982); Peter Widdowson, Hardy in History: ...
Thomas Hardy and women : sexual ideology and narrative form / Penny Boumelha The later years of Thomas Hardy, 1892-1928. Cambridge: University Press, 2011 Hardy, Thomas, Richard Little Purdy, and Michael Millgate. The Collected Letters of Thomas Hardy: 1920- 1925. Vol. 6. Clarendon, 1979....
This paper is an examination and exploration of Thomas Hardy's representation of women in his novel, Tess of the d'Urbervilles. It provides a brief evaluation of the era in which Hardy was writing, placing emphasis on the psychosexual intricacies of the late Victorian era and their impact ...
4. “Beauty lay not in the thing, but in what the thing symbolized.”— Thomas Hardy 5. “Did it never strike your mind that what every woman says, some women may feel?”— Thomas Hardy The top Thomas Hardy quotes about women and feminine energy ...
Thomas Hardy: Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) was an English writer most known for his novels, such as 'Far From the Maddening Crowd' and 'Jude the Obscure' which often dealt with the difficult issues of class and gender in the United Kingdom. He came from a lower-class background, and so ...
Though quiet and reserved in his personal life, Thomas Hardy loved intelligent, strong-minded women, but he feared the potential power of the emerging New Woman figures as much as he feared a world without them. 展开 被引量: 1 年份: 2011 ...
Thomas Hardy's Women 作者:Hubbard, Elbert 页数:12 定价:$ 8.99 ISBN:9781163030233 豆瓣评分 目前无人评价
Hardy had always written poetry and regarded the novel as an inferior genre. After Jude the Obscure was attacked on grounds of supposed immorality (it dealt sympathetically with open sexual relations between men and women), he abandoned fiction. However, the compelling reason was probably that his...
It is not long ago that Hardy gave up the novel because he felt that he could not deal honestly with themes that were of importance to him. It is easy to forget, in our plethora of sexual sewage, that simply in terms of subject-matter the naturalists mad