Abstract

This study examines the perpetual suffering of the farmers, agricultural workers, and peasants who were forced to abandon their habitat from Wessex and settle in big industrial cities of England. This forced migration was due to the industrialization and mechanization of the rural areas of Wessex which finally led to the environmental destruction during the critical period of the nineteenth century in the history of England. The peasants and farmers, who lost all sources of living, were heading towards the big cities in the hope of finding a new opportunity and a better way of living. As a result of this displacement, the moral and the social values of the English peasantry changed greatly. The life of the displaced farmers, agricultural workers, and peasants underwent powerful transformations as a result of the social change in the cities. There, they faced unforgettable social problems that destroyed the dreams and aspirations of most of them in life. The anguish and the agonies of the afflicted group of the farmers, agricultural workers, and peasants are vividly reflected in Thomas Hardy’s major novels. The Mayor of Casterbridge focuses on the tragic plight of the English peasantry when they come into contact with the people from the cities. Jude the Obscure (1895) portrays the disappointment and the tragedy of the ambitious countrymen who think that the glitter of the industrial cities offers them more happiness than the simple beauty of the rural society.

Highlights

  • Most of the later novels of Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) end in tragedy. This melancholic view of Hardy was the product of his personal and/or private experience in life, rather it reflected the social change of his age

  • The industrial revolution gradually started wiping out the rural areas of England; the population was on the move from the country to the city; the social ties which had united the small old communities of the past were falling apart step by step

  • Man as the Victim of Natural and Social Change In The Mayor of Casterbridge Hardy "comes as close as he ever can to being a social novelist". (Howe, 1985, p. 92) Hardy presents in this novel a real picture of a country man who suffers most bitterly from the social change, which is the outcome of technology

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Summary

Man as the Victim of Natural and Social Change

In The Mayor of Casterbridge Hardy "comes as close as he ever can to being a social novelist". (Howe, 1985, p. 92) Hardy presents in this novel a real picture of a country man who suffers most bitterly from the social change, which is the outcome of technology. Michael Henchard, representing the traditional society and the outmoded social values has to leave his place to Donald Farfrae who has come with new experiences from the advanced cities of England to bring a change to the life, the system and the values of the isolated Casterbridge. Henchard‟s problem is that he fails to understand the setting, the environment, the chronology, and the locale where he lives He tries to escape from his past by resorting to the city of Casterbridge which preserves and adores its past on the one hand and is open to technological advancement on the other. The tragedy of life, as Hardy stated in the novel, is that "happiness was but the occasional episode in a general drama of pain." (Hardy, 1989, p.326) This pessimistic view reflects Hardy‟s deep belief in fatalism and man‟s tragic existence which is recurrent in most of his novels and poems as well

Man as the Victim of False Understanding in a Changing Society
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