Sunday, August 18, 2019
Tess of the Dââ¬â¢Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy :: Thomas Hardy Tess Urbervilles Essays
  One of Thomas Hardyââ¬â¢s greatest works: ââ¬ËTess of the Dââ¬â¢Urbervillesââ¬Ë was  first published in 1891, a novel set in the fictional county of Wessex,  Britain. By the time of its appearance, Hardy was considered to be on  of Englandââ¬â¢s leading writers and had already published several well  known novels including ââ¬ËFar from the Madding Crowdââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËThe  Woodlandersââ¬â¢ as well as numerous other short stories.    However in spite of his reputation and fame, Hardy had immense  difficulty finding a publication prepared to publish Tess when he  offered it for serialization to London reviewers. The subject matter  and content was considered to be- in the eyes of Victorian society,  unfit for publications in which young people may read. A storyline  depicting a young girl seduced and raped by a man, then married and  rejected by another and then eventually murders the first man was  considered to be exceptionally scandalous and inappropriate. Finally  in order to pacify potential publishers, Hardy took the book apart and  rewrote and edited several of the scenes before any of the weekly  journals would take it as a serial. When the time came to publish the  novel in book form, Hardy reassembled it was it was originally  written.    The novelââ¬â¢s subtitle- ââ¬ËA Pure Womanââ¬â¢ came also under a great deal of  attack. Victorian critics argued that Tess could not possibly be  termed of as ââ¬Ëpureââ¬â¢ after a downfall such as hers and should instead  be labeled as a ââ¬ËFallenââ¬â¢ woman. Hardyââ¬â¢s frank (at least for the time)  depictions of sex, his criticism and questioning of religion and his  doubt within the narrative were too denounced to such an extent that  though the story did in the end bring him immense fame and fortune,  its reception at the start caused Hardy to lose confidence and the  novel was one of his last.    In Tess of the Dââ¬â¢Urbervilles, Hardy uses a variety of narrative  techniques in order to convey his own impressions of the society in  which both he and his character Tess lived. The narrative technique of  an author in any novel is crucial to the readers understanding of the  narrative. The way in which a novel is written influences the way in  which the reader interprets the events which occur throughout the  novel and allows the author to convey the feeling of time, place, and  people in the society in which the author is attempting to impart to  his or her readers. Hardyââ¬â¢s use of a third person omniscient narrator  who knows all and sees all allows the readers indirect insight into  the actions and emotions of specific characters. The omniscience of  the narrator allows the reader to not be influenced by the character    					    
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