Bibliographic Information

Reading Thomas Hardy

George Levine

(Reading writers and their work)

Cambridge University Press, 2017

  • : hardback
  • : pbk

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 134-135) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This major new reading of the novels of Thomas Hardy, by leading critic George Levine, disentangles the author's often elaborately distanced prose from his beautiful poetic and precise renderings of the natural world. Clear, direct and minimally academic in his own writing, Levine provides an overview of Hardy's entire fictional canon, with extensive discussions of his early and late novels including his last, The Well-Beloved. Levine draws new attention to the way Hardy absorbed both the ideas and the writing strategies of Charles Darwin, and develops new perspectives first articulated in the criticism of great novelists - in particular Virginia Woolf and D. H. Lawrence. Levine departs from the critical norm by reading Hardy in the context of his deep feeling for the natural world and all living things, and the implicit affirmation of life that sometimes drives his bleakest narratives.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Shaping Hardy's art: vision, class, and sex
  • 2. Hardy and Darwin: an enchanting Hardy?
  • 3. The Mayor of Casterbridge: reversing the real
  • Interlude: Jude and the power of art
  • 4. From mindless matter to the art of the mind: The Well-Beloved
  • 5. The poetry of the novels.

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