Modern City as the Source of Tragedy in Thomas Hardy’s Major Novels

Authors

  • Asst. Prof. Dr. Azad Hamad Sharif Department of English College of Languages Salahaddin University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v59i3.1149

Keywords:

Modern City, Tragedy, False Understanding, Peasantry, Social Change, Environmental Destruction

Abstract

     This study examines the perpetual suffering of the farmers, agricultural workers, and peasants who were forced to abandon their habitat from Wessex and settle in big industrial cities of England. This forced migration was due to the industrialization and mechanization of the rural areas of Wessex which finally led to the environmental destruction during the critical period of the nineteenth century in the history of England. The peasants and farmers, who lost all sources of living, were heading towards the big cities in the hope of finding a new opportunity and a better way of living. As a result of this displacement, the moral and the social values of the English peasantry changed greatly. The life of the displaced farmers, agricultural workers, and peasants underwent powerful transformations as a result of the social change in the cities. There, they faced unforgettable social problems that destroyed the dreams and aspirations of most of them in life. The anguish and the agonies of the afflicted group of the farmers, agricultural workers, and peasants are vividly reflected in Thomas Hardy’s major novels. The Mayor of Casterbridge focuses on the tragic plight of the English peasantry when they come into contact with the people from the cities.  Jude the Obscure (1895) portrays the disappointment and the tragedy of the ambitious countrymen who think that the glitter of the industrial cities offers them more happiness than the simple beauty of the rural society.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Allen, Walter (1984). The English Novel. Middlesex: Penguin Books.

Briggs, Asa (1965). Victorian Cities. New York: Harper and Row.

Briggs, Asa (1965). Victorian People. Middlesex: Pelican Books.

Draper, R.P. (1983). The Mayor of Casterbridge Critical Quarterly. 25 (1): 57-70.

Darwin, Charles (1958). The Origin of Species. USA: New American Library.

Eagleton, Mary and David Pierce (1979). Attitudes to Class in the English Novel.

London: Thames and Hudson.

Engels, Friedrich [1845] (1987). The Condition of the Working Class in England. Edited

by Victor Kiernan. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.

Fussel, D. H. (1979). The Maladroit Delay: The Changing Times in Hardy‟s The Mayor

of Casterbridge. Critical Quarterly. 21 (3):17-30.

Gittings, Robert (1980). The Older Hardy. Middlesex: Penguin Books.

Hardy, Thomas (2005). Jude the Obscure. New Delhi: UBSPD.

(1989). The Mayor of Casterbridge. Edited by: A. N. Jeffares Beirut: York

Press.

Higbie, Robert (1979). The Flight of the Swallow in The Mayor of Casterbridge.

English Language Notes. 16 (4): 311-312.

Houghton, Walter E (1985). The Victorian Frame of Mind, 1830-1870. New Haven,

CT:

Yale University Press.

Howe, Irving (1985). Thomas Hardy. London: Macmillan Publishing Company.

Kettle, Arnold (ed.) (1977). The Nineteenth Century Novel. London: Heinemann.

Al-Ustath Journal for Human and Social Sciences Vol.(59) No.(3) (September -2020AD, 1441AH)

King, Jeanette (1979). Tragedy in the Victorian Novel: Theory and Practice in the

Novels of George Eliot, Thomas Hardy and Henry James. London:

Cambridge University Press.

Millgate, Michael (ed.) (1984). The Life and Work of Thomas Hardy by Thomas Hardy.

London: Macmillan.

Prentice, Nick (2016). Thomas Hardy’s Tragic Vision: Writing Towards ProtoModernist Modes of Fiction. Unpublished PhD Dissertation. University of the

West of England.

Ruskin, John [1884] (2006). The Storm-Cloud of the Nineteenth Century. http://

www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/20204. (27/9/2019).

Schomp, Virginia (2011). The City: Life in the Victorian England. New York: Marshall

Cavendish Corporation.

Schwartz, Barry N. (1970). Jude the Obscure in the Age of Anxiety. Studies in English

Literature -1500-1900. 10 (4): 793-804.

Tanner, Tony (1968). Colour and Movement in Hardy‟s Tess of the d’Urbervilles.

Critical Quarterly. 10 (3): 219-239.

Thomson, James (1880). The City of Dreadful Night, and Other Poems. London:

Reeves and Turner.

Weatherby, Harold L. (1975). Hardy and the Fragmentation of Consciousness. The

Sewanee Review. 83 (3): 469-483.

Williams, Raymond (1964). Thomas Hardy. Critical Quarterly. 6; 341–351.

Downloads

Published

15-09-2020

How to Cite

Modern City as the Source of Tragedy in Thomas Hardy’s Major Novels. (2020). ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, 59(3), 57-68. https://doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v59i3.1149

Similar Articles

1-10 of 471

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.