16.6.2008Guided Text Production SS                                                                Aija KorhonenBenjamin Wright                                                                                0620782Term Paper                          Tragedy According to Tess of D’Urbervilles Thomas Hardy's (1840-1928) novel Tess of the D'Urbervilles (1891) was Hardy's attempt to take a closer look upon the ideals of his era, and through Tess and her story, criticize it. Hardy himself said of tragedy; "It may be put thus in brief: a tragedy exhibits a state of things in the life on an individual which unavoidably causes some natural aim or desire of his to end in a catastrophe when carried out." There are many ways to perceive a text as a tragedy, beginning from Aristotle who was the first to define the term and concept of tragedy as "the imitation of an action which is serious, complete and substantial" and "by evoking pity and terror it brings about the purgation of those emotions". During the Renaissance, however, the concept of tragedy experienced a reformation and was fitted to express the qualities admired by the society, and later, England during the Victorian era also reformed Aristotle's ideas to accommodate their religious as well as largely accepted social norms and views.This essay will take a closer look of those ideas at tragedy raised by Aristotle, some of the times when tragedy went through reformation, and Hardy himself, all in connection to Hardy's Tess of the D'Urbervilles and the questions, and ideas, raised within the novel that makes Tess' torments a tragedy. Tragedy of TessTess can be perceived as a tragedy merely due to the obvious reasons such as how she is being taken advantage by her parents who in their greed and false pride upon a newly learned ancestors play Tess's guilt to get their foot in to a better life, and the consequent manipulation and abuse of Tess by he "cus" Alec D'Urberville, and the various tragic events that take place thereafter. Hardy used his novels to get more attention drawn towards the hypocrisy of English society as well as deal with the transition of the beginning of England's shift from old-fashioned, socially condemning, agricultural nation towards to a more modern and industrial one. The ordeals faced by the Durbeyfield family can be seen as an allegory to the fading in importance of aristocracy and "old money" as well as the importance of a name when industries started to blossom, shortening the gap between classes into obscurity.The tragic events and plot can be divided into four major parts, or rather, point of views; that of Tess herself, and the tragic lives and experiences of Alec D'Urberville, Angel Clare and then John and Joan Durbeyfield's create their own tragic story lines besides Tess's. John and Joan Durbeyfield's tragedies are self-imposed, as after learning of their noble ancestry, their pride rules over their better judgment and even over their love for daughter,
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whom they are ready and willing to sacrifice to be acknowledged. John Durbeyfield's pride that brings about his own destruction (as he becomes too "noble" to work hard and rather sits and thinks of his great birth right) is symbolized through his love for the dead horse; "I won't sell his old body. When we D'Urbervilles was knights in the land, we didn't sell our chargers for cat's meat. Let 'em keep their shillings!"Such is their pride that even when Tess returns from Alec D'Urbervilles house and gives birth to a son, they refuse to get the baby proper care, ...

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