The nineteenth century was a time of fundamental changes in British
society. The great Victorian writer Thomas Hardy reflects upon this
time of transition by creating a setting for his regional novels
which is much more than a mere background to the narration. Over
the years his perception and representation of nature and landscape
changes, partly influenced by the findings of Charles Darwin,
partly caused by the effects of the Industrial Revolution. This
book analyses regional elements in three of Hardy's novels, namely
Far from the Madding Crowd (1874), The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886)
and Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1891). It shows why and how he moves
away from the pastoral to a more realistic depiction of rural
English society. Aspects that will be looked at in greater detail
are the oppositions of country and town, tradition and change,
social acceptance and exclusion, dialect speech and standard
English and the relationship between external and internal nature.
This book is of interest to scholars of Thomas Hardy and English
literature but it also appeals to anyone wanting to gain some
deeper insight into the development of the novel in the nineteenth
century.
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