Description

Book Synopsis
This motivational analysis of the protagonists in Thomas Hardy''s three most widely read novels--Tess of the d''Urbervilles, The Mayor of Casterbridge, and Jude the Obscure--highlights an often-overlooked aspect of his art. Bernard J. Paris shows Hardy''s genius in creating imagined human beings. He demonstrates that while Hardy tends to blame external conditions for his characters'' painful fates, their downfalls are due to a very complex combination of cosmic, social, and psychological factors. Hardy''s characters are usually discussed primarily in thematic terms. The characters are are so richly portrayed, Paris argues, that they can be better understood independent of Hardy''s interpretations, in motivational terms and he utilizes the psychologist Karen Horney''s theories to recover Hardy''s intuitions. The characters are full of inner conflicts that make them difficult to fathom, but the approach Paris employs explains their contradictions and illuminates th

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments, Preface, 1 Initial Attraction, 2 “A Confusion of Many Standards”: Conflicting Value Systems in Tess of the d’Urbervilles, 3 Tess the Woman, 4 Th e Mayor of Casterbridge, 5 Jude the Obscure : Jude, 6 Jude the Obscure : Jude and Sue, 7 Jude the Obscure : Th e Catastrophe, Conclusion, References , Index

A General Drama of Pain

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    A Paperback by Bernard J. Paris

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 1/28/2017 12:09:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781138507197, 978-1138507197
      ISBN10: 1138507199

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This motivational analysis of the protagonists in Thomas Hardy''s three most widely read novels--Tess of the d''Urbervilles, The Mayor of Casterbridge, and Jude the Obscure--highlights an often-overlooked aspect of his art. Bernard J. Paris shows Hardy''s genius in creating imagined human beings. He demonstrates that while Hardy tends to blame external conditions for his characters'' painful fates, their downfalls are due to a very complex combination of cosmic, social, and psychological factors. Hardy''s characters are usually discussed primarily in thematic terms. The characters are are so richly portrayed, Paris argues, that they can be better understood independent of Hardy''s interpretations, in motivational terms and he utilizes the psychologist Karen Horney''s theories to recover Hardy''s intuitions. The characters are full of inner conflicts that make them difficult to fathom, but the approach Paris employs explains their contradictions and illuminates th

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments, Preface, 1 Initial Attraction, 2 “A Confusion of Many Standards”: Conflicting Value Systems in Tess of the d’Urbervilles, 3 Tess the Woman, 4 Th e Mayor of Casterbridge, 5 Jude the Obscure : Jude, 6 Jude the Obscure : Jude and Sue, 7 Jude the Obscure : Th e Catastrophe, Conclusion, References , Index

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