The Novels of Thomas Hardy: Illusion and Reality
By (Author) Penelope Vigar
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
7th November 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
823.8
Hardback
226
278g
What he himself characteristically called his idiosyncratic mode of regard is a factor few readers of Hardys novels can overlook and one with which all serious students of his fiction must come to terms. The fact that there is nevertheless little final agreement about the nature of his achievement has prompted Miss Vigar to make a fresh study of Hardys own notes and essays on the art of the novel and to analyse his fictional technique in the light of these unduly neglected observations. Her approach centres on Hardys pervasive theme of the contrast between appearance and reality and on his frequent use of pictorial devices to express his imaginative vision. She is able to develop a critical account of Hardys work that can convincingly explain, by reference to the same criteria, both its strengths and its weaknesses, its successes and failures.
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