OATD: Votta, Richard J. - Structure and meaning in Hardy's fiction: an examination of three major novels

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Title Structure and meaning in Hardy's fiction: an examination of three major novels
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Publication Date
Degree PhD
Discipline/Department English, General Literature, and Rhetoric
Degree Level doctoral
University/Publisher Binghamton University
Abstract Thus, though there is a considerable amount of criticism on [Thomas Hardy’s] novels, there is a clear absence of any significant close structural reading. The study which follows proposes to fill this gap offering an examination of three novels that is neither synoptically nor microscopically limited, nor restricted to a particular critical angle. It offers simply a close structural analysis of Hardy’s fiction, considering individual novels as separate and cohesive artistic units. It returns to fictional plot, to a close examination of narrative orderings. It proposes to describe in detail the way in which structural technique crucially participates in the fiction’s overall aesthetic and thematic effect. It is an attempt to demonstrate that plot in the work is something more than mere obtrusive artifice. Rather, it will be implicitly argued, structure is so intimately and organically connected with Hardy’s vision of life that it is required by—part of, and inseparable from—the theme. The presumptions and suppositions underlying the study are loosely and simply Aristotelian, that meaning resides in and is revealed by structure, and that to understand theme it is necessary to see how the work is made, how blocks of event relate, interact, and cohere to form an aesthetically integrated whole. The study will, it is hoped, not repeat the past mistakes either of establishing algebraic or geometric patterns or of banishing “plot” from the respected critical lexicon surrounding the fiction. Instead, it will try to maintain the valuable insights and perceptions of the past and enhance them by considering again a too long neglected element. This, then, is the critical background and theoretic assumption motivating this present study; hence the first half of the title, "structure and meaning in Hardy's fiction.” There is, however, an important second part of the title, “an examination of three major novels.” It is usually assumed that in Hardy’s fictional work there are six major novels. Therefore, why consider only three here? There are two reasons for such selectivity. First of all, given the nature of this particular study, it is simply impractical to consider all the major novels. To dwell at the comprehensive length required by the method on six separate novels would result in a study much too long. It seems far preferable to examine three novels fully rather than six sketchily. Secondly, the intention here is merely to demonstrate the usefulness of the structural approach to Hardy’s fiction, leaving to the reader the extension of the method to the work not discussed. But why these three novels in particular? Admittedly, the study omits three of Hardy’s finest novels, The Return of the Native, The Mayor of Casterbridge and Tess of the d'Urbervilles. There were several important considerations involved in this choice. First, Far from the Madding Crowd is the novel most often singled out for detraction because of its obvious structural design and schematically plotted…
Subjects/Keywords Thomas Hardy; Criticism and interpretation
Contributors John H. Hagan; Philip E. Rogers; Bernard Rosenthal
Country of Publication us
Record ID oai:orb.binghamton.edu:dissertation_and_theses-1348
Repository binghamton
Date Retrieved
Date Indexed 2024-05-08
Created Date 1976-01-01 08:00:00
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