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- catalog abstract "Simon Gatrell offers a fresh and stimulating exploration of Hardy's account in fiction of the individual man or woman's relationship with various aspects of the encompassing world - with other men and women, with the aggregation known as society, with the natural and artificial environment, and with the supernatural. He focuses on the importance of community in Hardy's fiction, especially on the ability of rural villages and towns to withstand the stresses of industrialized agriculture and the national standardization of education and culture. He also proposes that the full titles Hardy gave to a number of his novels have not been sufficiently attended to as signs instinct with meaning. The title of the book alludes, in part, to Pope's Essay on Man. Simon Gatrell writes, "In his examination of humankind Pope considers how we stand as individuals in relation to divine power, to Nature, and to each other. It is my suggestion that Hardy considers essentially the same questions in his novels: what external to us causes things to happen - God, fate, destiny, the Immanent Will? how do individuals stand in relation to their environment [and] society? and what part do individuals' own natures play in what occurs to them?" Thomas Hardy and the Proper Study of Mankind concentrates on eight of Hardy's fourteen novels, ranging from the early Under the Greenwood Tree, through neglected middle-period works like Two on a Tower, to the final masterpieces Tess of the d' Urbervilles and Jude the Obscure. Of particular note is the author's provocatively imaginative reconstruction of the story of Angel Clare, which follows the chapter on Tess. There are also chapters on the role dance plays in Hardy's fiction and on how his writing encompasses the wider world beyond Wessex and England. A feature of the critical inquiry is the illumination afforded by the study of Hardy's often substantial revisions.".
- catalog contributor b5794669.
- catalog created "1993.".
- catalog date "1993".
- catalog date "1993.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1993.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-193) and index.".
- catalog description "Prelude: Hardy's Titles -- 1. Under the Greenwood Tree or The Mellstock Quire? -- 2. Hardy's Dances -- 3. The Return of the Native: Character and the Natural Environment -- 4. The Trumpet-Major, A Laodicean and Two on a Tower: The Man-Made Environment -- 5. The Mayor of Casterbridge: The Fate of Michael Henchard's Characters -- 6. Tess of the d'Urbervilles -- 7. Angel Clare's Story -- 8. Sex, Marriage and the Decline of Traditional Community in Jude the Obscure, together with a Digression on the Evils (or otherwise) of drink -- 9. 'From the White Sea to Cape Horn': Thomas Hardy and the Wider World.".
- catalog description "Simon Gatrell offers a fresh and stimulating exploration of Hardy's account in fiction of the individual man or woman's relationship with various aspects of the encompassing world - with other men and women, with the aggregation known as society, with the natural and artificial environment, and with the supernatural. He focuses on the importance of community in Hardy's fiction, especially on the ability of rural villages and towns to withstand the stresses of industrialized agriculture and the national standardization of education and culture. He also proposes that the full titles Hardy gave to a number of his novels have not been sufficiently attended to as signs instinct with meaning. The title of the book alludes, in part, to Pope's Essay on Man. Simon Gatrell writes, "In his examination of humankind Pope considers how we stand as individuals in relation to divine power, to Nature, and to each other. It is my suggestion that Hardy considers essentially the same questions in his novels: what external to us causes things to happen - God, fate, destiny, the Immanent Will? how do individuals stand in relation to their environment [and] society? and what part do individuals' own natures play in what occurs to them?" Thomas Hardy and the Proper Study of Mankind concentrates on eight of Hardy's fourteen novels, ranging from the early Under the Greenwood Tree, through neglected middle-period works like Two on a Tower, to the final masterpieces Tess of the d' Urbervilles and Jude the Obscure. Of particular note is the author's provocatively imaginative reconstruction of the story of Angel Clare, which follows the chapter on Tess. There are also chapters on the role dance plays in Hardy's fiction and on how his writing encompasses the wider world beyond Wessex and England. A feature of the critical inquiry is the illumination afforded by the study of Hardy's often substantial revisions.".
- catalog extent "ix, 195 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "0813914353".
- catalog isPartOf "Victorian literature and culture series".
- catalog issued "1993".
- catalog issued "1993.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Charlottesville : University Press of Virginia,".
- catalog spatial "England".
- catalog spatial "England.".
- catalog subject "823/.8 20".
- catalog subject "Community life in literature.".
- catalog subject "Hardy, Thomas, 1840-1928 Political and social views.".
- catalog subject "Human beings in literature.".
- catalog subject "Literature and anthropology England History 19th century.".
- catalog subject "Literature and anthropology England.".
- catalog subject "Literature and society England History 19th century.".
- catalog subject "Literature and society England.".
- catalog subject "PR4757.P6 G37 1993".
- catalog tableOfContents "Prelude: Hardy's Titles -- 1. Under the Greenwood Tree or The Mellstock Quire? -- 2. Hardy's Dances -- 3. The Return of the Native: Character and the Natural Environment -- 4. The Trumpet-Major, A Laodicean and Two on a Tower: The Man-Made Environment -- 5. The Mayor of Casterbridge: The Fate of Michael Henchard's Characters -- 6. Tess of the d'Urbervilles -- 7. Angel Clare's Story -- 8. Sex, Marriage and the Decline of Traditional Community in Jude the Obscure, together with a Digression on the Evils (or otherwise) of drink -- 9. 'From the White Sea to Cape Horn': Thomas Hardy and the Wider World.".
- catalog title "Thomas Hardy and the proper study of mankind / Simon Gatrell.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".