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Jude the obscure by Thomas Hardy.

By: Hardy, Thomas.
Publisher: England Penguin Books c1994Description: 490 p.ISBN: 9780140620603.Subject(s): Didactic fiction | Love storiesDDC classification: D H222 1994 Summary: Jude Fawley, a stone-mason, has already suffered. His academic ambitions were thwarted by his poverty and class: trapped into a loveless marriage, he is now alone but not free. He comes to love his cousin Sue who, seemingly emancipated, is herself miserably married. Sue's words to Jude are prophetic, for although together they defy conventional morality to seize a chance of happiness, they are ultimately defeated by both circumstance and the flaws within their own nature. Thomas Hardy's last novel is focused on the themes of sex and marriage. The tragedy of Jude's struggle for happiness is intensified by the lack of opportunity for the ordinary man to improve his lot, despite the changes and developments of Victorian society.
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Item type Current location Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book High School Library
High School Library
Fiction D H222 1994 (Browse shelf) 1 Available HS3312
Total holds: 0
Browsing High School Library Shelves , Shelving location: Fiction , Collection code: Fiction Close shelf browser
D G823 2011 Will Grayson, Will Grayson / D G893 2006 Marley & me : D H222 1994 Tess of the d'Urbervilles D H222 1994 Jude the obscure D H318 2003 The scarlet letter D H55 2006 The red badge of courage / D H752 2007 The Iliad

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Jude Fawley, a stone-mason, has already suffered. His academic ambitions were thwarted by his poverty and class: trapped into a loveless marriage, he is now alone but not free. He comes to love his cousin Sue who, seemingly emancipated, is herself miserably married. Sue's words to Jude are prophetic, for although together they defy conventional morality to seize a chance of happiness, they are ultimately defeated by both circumstance and the flaws within their own nature.
Thomas Hardy's last novel is focused on the themes of sex and marriage. The tragedy of Jude's struggle for happiness is intensified by the lack of opportunity for the ordinary man to improve his lot, despite the changes and developments of Victorian society.

FICTION