Abstract

As one of the prominent ideologies of the nineteenth-century— in a complex interrelation with other contemporary ideological discourses particularly femininity and marriage—religion adopts a critical stance in Hardy’s presentation of characters. Breaching the religio-conventional image of femininity as “Angel in the House” and “Cow Woman,” Hardy’s Jude the Obscure (1895) is indeed deemed to be his milestone in presenting his anti-Christian attitudes towards the contemporary religion. This study aims to present Hardy’s outright hostility towards the nineteenth-century Christianity through his creation of non-conformist characters, necessitating a parallel study with other contemporary discourses regarding marriage and femininity, and conflict with the religion of the time. Hardy’s magnum opus, the work on which he was to stake his final reputation as a novelist, was clearly Jude the Obscure which as a noticeable socio-religious experimentation of the late nineteenth-century, reveals Hardy’s perception of new ideas about femininity and marriage by presenting the hot contemporary issues of “New Woman” and “Free Union” through the development and presentation of Sue Bridehead and her free union with Jude, respectively. Hardy’s presentation of Sue Bridehead as a “New Woman,” and employing the “Free Union” in marked contrast with the nineteenth-century convention of marriage as a “Bonded Pair” is Hardy’s closing upshot of his final novelistic attempt. The non-conformist Jude and Sue are presented as figures touching the Victorian Christian standards of morality, while, the final tragic destiny of Jude and Sue’s helplessness attest to the writer’s substantial contribution as a Victorian male novelist to the ideologies circulating at the time.

Highlights

  • Hardy was successful enough in giving his message despite having to swim against the current [the Victorian conventions], Thomas Hardy was not drowned; his message survived [...] he said it by means of art [his novels and poetry] (Chakraborti, 1997, p. 5)

  • Hardy is eulogized as a prominent Victorian literary figure whose fictional characters, epitomizing his personal thoughts and impressions, representing his hostility towards the Victorian Christian standards of morality and purity

  • Jude the Obscure is an accumulation of issues related to marriage and the position of women in the sole purpose of indicting the institution of marriage

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Summary

Introduction

Hardy was successful enough in giving his message despite having to swim against the current [the Victorian conventions], Thomas Hardy was not drowned; his message survived [...] he said it by means of art [his novels and poetry] (Chakraborti, 1997, p. 5).From a Victorian perspective, a woman’s duties and responsibilities were defined within the domestic hearth as a committed angel whose purity supplies the family’s morality. Being socially guilty of corrupting the Christian morals, Hardy’s fictional characters are observed outside the parameters of Victorian decorum of a chaste virgin who are, rather, vociferously condemned for their socio-religious non-conformity. Hardy is eulogized as a prominent Victorian literary figure whose fictional characters, epitomizing his personal thoughts and impressions, representing his hostility towards the Victorian Christian standards of morality and purity. Throughout Hardy’s fiction, Jude the Obscure in this study, femininity and marriage are used as the main vehicles through which Hardy’s religious cynicism is carried. In what seems to be an attempt for a fuller understanding of Hardy’s ideologies about femininity and marriage, an in-depth analysis is offered to discuss Hardy’s notion of femininity and marriage exhaustively through his selected novel, Jude the Obscure, in the ensuing pages

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