Female sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896

<p>The thesis sets out to examine Hardy's representations of women in sexual and marital relationships, and to relate those representations to contemporary developments in sexual ideology and in fiction. An Introduction considers the way in which ideology exerts pressure upon literary fo...

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Main Authors: Boumelha, P, Penny Boumelha
格式: Thesis
語言:English
出版: 1981
主題:
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author Boumelha, P
Penny Boumelha
author_facet Boumelha, P
Penny Boumelha
author_sort Boumelha, P
collection OXFORD
description <p>The thesis sets out to examine Hardy's representations of women in sexual and marital relationships, and to relate those representations to contemporary developments in sexual ideology and in fiction. An Introduction considers the way in which ideology exerts pressure upon literary form, and discusses the particular appeal of female characters to Hardy's imagination. The first chapter is concerned with the constitution of sexuality as a subject of public discussion, and with its decisive shift from the area of moral discourse to that of the scientific. The influence of Darwinism and of neo-Darwinism upon ideologies of sexual difference and the nature of woman is discussed, together with the ambiguous political status of much contemporary feminist thought. There follows a chapter on Hardy's experimentalism with genre and narrative voice in his early fiction, and its relation to his female characters. An examination of <em>The Return of the Native</em> situates it as Hardy's first attempt at a double tragedy, of a man and of a woman, intellectual and sexual. "Women and the New Fiction 1880-1900" gives an account of the development of the "Fiction of Sex" and the novel of the "New Woman", and discusses the novel of womanliness, liberal feminist fiction, and the fiction of womanhood. The challenge that these new forms and modes of writing posed to the dominance of realism in the period is discussed. The last three chapters examine Hardy's last major novels in this enabling context of the New Fiction, and focus on the experiments with narrative method that bring about a radical break between <em>Tess of the d'Urbervilles</em> and <em>Jude the Obscure</em>. A brief conclusion argues that Hardy's experimentalism must be seen in its relation to contemporary fictional practice, and not as the product of personal temperament or of his own sexual and marital experiences. The thesis ends with a bibliography of works consulted.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:9830d5f7-bbae-4f11-8a5d-c42ae4a72e6d2022-03-27T00:05:18ZFemale sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:9830d5f7-bbae-4f11-8a5d-c42ae4a72e6dDivorce in literatureSex in literatureCharactersMarriage in literatureWomen in literatureWomenEnglishPolonsky Theses Digitisation Project1981Boumelha, PPenny Boumelha<p>The thesis sets out to examine Hardy's representations of women in sexual and marital relationships, and to relate those representations to contemporary developments in sexual ideology and in fiction. An Introduction considers the way in which ideology exerts pressure upon literary form, and discusses the particular appeal of female characters to Hardy's imagination. The first chapter is concerned with the constitution of sexuality as a subject of public discussion, and with its decisive shift from the area of moral discourse to that of the scientific. The influence of Darwinism and of neo-Darwinism upon ideologies of sexual difference and the nature of woman is discussed, together with the ambiguous political status of much contemporary feminist thought. There follows a chapter on Hardy's experimentalism with genre and narrative voice in his early fiction, and its relation to his female characters. An examination of <em>The Return of the Native</em> situates it as Hardy's first attempt at a double tragedy, of a man and of a woman, intellectual and sexual. "Women and the New Fiction 1880-1900" gives an account of the development of the "Fiction of Sex" and the novel of the "New Woman", and discusses the novel of womanliness, liberal feminist fiction, and the fiction of womanhood. The challenge that these new forms and modes of writing posed to the dominance of realism in the period is discussed. The last three chapters examine Hardy's last major novels in this enabling context of the New Fiction, and focus on the experiments with narrative method that bring about a radical break between <em>Tess of the d'Urbervilles</em> and <em>Jude the Obscure</em>. A brief conclusion argues that Hardy's experimentalism must be seen in its relation to contemporary fictional practice, and not as the product of personal temperament or of his own sexual and marital experiences. The thesis ends with a bibliography of works consulted.</p>
spellingShingle Divorce in literature
Sex in literature
Characters
Marriage in literature
Women in literature
Women
Boumelha, P
Penny Boumelha
Female sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896
title Female sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896
title_full Female sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896
title_fullStr Female sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896
title_full_unstemmed Female sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896
title_short Female sexuality, marriage and divorce in the fiction of Thomas Hardy, with special reference to the period 1887-1896
title_sort female sexuality marriage and divorce in the fiction of thomas hardy with special reference to the period 1887 1896
topic Divorce in literature
Sex in literature
Characters
Marriage in literature
Women in literature
Women
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AT pennyboumelha femalesexualitymarriageanddivorceinthefictionofthomashardywithspecialreferencetotheperiod18871896