Description

Book Synopsis

This 1886 novel may be Hardy’s most intense and gripping narrative. We first see the central character, Michael Henchard, as a drunken and unemployed hay-trusser who sells his wife Susan and his daughter Elizabeth-Jane at a fair. When he is eventually reunited with the two, he has become the contented and prosperous mayor of a thriving market town. But the downward spiral begins. Henchard’s fall is hastened by a series of coincidences and quarrels, and by his own jealousy and pride. Though the perspective on events that Hardy gives us is often that of other characters (Elizabeth-Jane in particular), Henchard remains the central focus; in the end he is a tragic figure, bankrupt, emotionally broken and an outcast from society.

Prepared by one of the world’s leading Hardy scholars, this edition includes a critical introduction and a range of background materials from the period. Historical documents (concerning such topics as the corn laws and the practice of wife-selling) and contemporary reviews help set this remarkable novel in the context out of which it emerged.



Trade Review

“Of all the great Victorian novelists, Hardy is the one who consistently requires most annotation and careful contextual placing. The density of regional reference, the often complex composition, publication and reception histories, the author’s vexed relationship with his age—all call for tactful but learned editing. The noted Victorian scholar Norman Page supplies this admirably for Broadview Press’s Mayor of Casterbridge. This is the edition I shall use and prescribe in the future.” — John Sutherland, Professor Emeritus, University College London



Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction

Composition and Publication
Setting: Time and History
Setting: Town and Country
“A Man of Character”
Narrative Technique: Pictorialism and Circularity
Language and Style
A Note on the Text

Thomas Hardy: A Brief Chronology

The Life and Death of the Mayor of Castlebridge:
A Story of a Man of Character

Appendix A: Dialect Words and Expressions
Appendix B: Place-names
Appendix C: Wife-selling
Appendix D: The Corn Laws
Appendix E: Prince Albert in Dorchester
Appendix F: Maumbury Ring and the Execution of Mary Channing
Appendix G: The Skimmington Ride
Appendix H: Henchard’s Bankruptcy
Appendix I: The First Book of Samuel
Appendix J: Hardy’s “General Preface”
Appendix K: Contemporary Reviews

Works Cited and Recommended Reading

The Mayor of Casterbridge

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A Paperback / softback by Thomas Hardy, Norman Page

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    View other formats and editions of The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy

    Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
    Publication Date: 30/03/1997
    ISBN13: 9781551111223, 978-1551111223
    ISBN10: 1551111225

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    This 1886 novel may be Hardy’s most intense and gripping narrative. We first see the central character, Michael Henchard, as a drunken and unemployed hay-trusser who sells his wife Susan and his daughter Elizabeth-Jane at a fair. When he is eventually reunited with the two, he has become the contented and prosperous mayor of a thriving market town. But the downward spiral begins. Henchard’s fall is hastened by a series of coincidences and quarrels, and by his own jealousy and pride. Though the perspective on events that Hardy gives us is often that of other characters (Elizabeth-Jane in particular), Henchard remains the central focus; in the end he is a tragic figure, bankrupt, emotionally broken and an outcast from society.

    Prepared by one of the world’s leading Hardy scholars, this edition includes a critical introduction and a range of background materials from the period. Historical documents (concerning such topics as the corn laws and the practice of wife-selling) and contemporary reviews help set this remarkable novel in the context out of which it emerged.



    Trade Review

    “Of all the great Victorian novelists, Hardy is the one who consistently requires most annotation and careful contextual placing. The density of regional reference, the often complex composition, publication and reception histories, the author’s vexed relationship with his age—all call for tactful but learned editing. The noted Victorian scholar Norman Page supplies this admirably for Broadview Press’s Mayor of Casterbridge. This is the edition I shall use and prescribe in the future.” — John Sutherland, Professor Emeritus, University College London



    Table of Contents

    Preface
    Introduction

    Composition and Publication
    Setting: Time and History
    Setting: Town and Country
    “A Man of Character”
    Narrative Technique: Pictorialism and Circularity
    Language and Style
    A Note on the Text

    Thomas Hardy: A Brief Chronology

    The Life and Death of the Mayor of Castlebridge:
    A Story of a Man of Character

    Appendix A: Dialect Words and Expressions
    Appendix B: Place-names
    Appendix C: Wife-selling
    Appendix D: The Corn Laws
    Appendix E: Prince Albert in Dorchester
    Appendix F: Maumbury Ring and the Execution of Mary Channing
    Appendix G: The Skimmington Ride
    Appendix H: Henchard’s Bankruptcy
    Appendix I: The First Book of Samuel
    Appendix J: Hardy’s “General Preface”
    Appendix K: Contemporary Reviews

    Works Cited and Recommended Reading

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