<p>THOMAS HARDY: JUDE THE OBSCURE</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Edited by Margaret Elvy</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>A new edition of Thomas Hardy&rsquo;s last novel Jude the Obscure 1895) a sister (or brother) book to Tess of the d&#39;Urbervilles (1891) before the author turned to poetry and other forms of writing. Thomas Hardy attacks similar targets as he did in Tess: the family politics religion marriage education and sexuality. Hardy was on fire when he wrote Jude the Obscure - it is a very angry work.&nbsp;</p><p>Jude the Obscure contains far more polemic and philosophizing than Tess or any of Thomas Hardy&rsquo;s earlier novels. The preaching and polemic threatens to undo the narrative which is nevertheless &#39;realist&#39; like other Thomas Hardy fictions.&nbsp;</p><p>In Jude the Obscure Thomas Hardy was stretching the novel to the limit testing the boundaries of what is &#39;acceptable&#39;. In Jude the Obscure the things that say &#39;you shan&#39;t&#39; are variously God religion education circumstance chance nature and marriage. All of the institutions and &#39;causes&#39; reside inside the individual which is what makes the problems they create so difficult to deal with for Sue and Jude. Patriarchy culture and society are not in some &#39;out there&#39; space but in people. Hardy&#39;s thoughts on Jude the Obscure as expressed in the Life and letters include his desire for a novel about characters &#39;into whose souls the iron has entered&#39;; a desire to make the story &#39;grimy&#39; in order to heighten the contrast between the ideal life and the &#39;squalid real life&#39;; the novel &#39;makes for morality&#39; Hardy said; and ended up &#39;a mass of imperfections&#39; a remark many artists have made of their work.&nbsp;</p><p>Includes illustrations an introduction bibliography and notes. Paperback.&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
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