Jude the Obscure
Hello Readers, I am writing down answers to some questions in this blog. Which is given by Dr. Dilip Barad sir, Department of English Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University.
Introduction of the Author Thomas Hardy
"One of the most renowned poets and novelists in English literary history"
In other words, Hardy's decision in depicting Jude and Sue as the "wretched" man and the "poor woman" somehow implies that his pioneer characters' daring personalities are finally influenced and fated by the author's Victorian "internalized" conventions. It has already been mentioned that Jude and Sue represent the resisting discourse within society. It should be added that according to Foucault, this resistance is an inward necessity for the dominant system to consolidate its own discourse. Jude the Obscure implicitly supports such an institution of marriage. The Victorian period is not a suitable time for the unconventional, marginal discourses of marriage. As Jude says, "Our ideas were fifty years too soon".
Thomas Hardy, as a member of Victorian society, presents the subject of marriage in Jude the Obscure in a two-dimensional discourse. The first level, which is explicit, seems to be a critical approach to Victorian marriage; the second one, however, the one that is more implicitly provided, is a consolidatory discourse that supports traditional marriage.
Write an essay on the symbols like Christminister and Little Father Time in the novel Jude the Obscure.
Among the symbols employed by Hardy in Jude, the biblical archetypal character is the most deliberate and intentional. Generally speaking, an archetype is an image that recalls basically psychological events common to all people and all cultures. A character or a pattern of images or events so fundamental that it has never been absent from literature, religion, myth, and dream.
As a literary technique, symbolism in English literature has a great tradition, and it plays an important role in Hardy's Jude the Obscure. This thesis mainly focuses on Hardy's use of symbolism, which includes biblical archetypes and the theme of the quest implied by the context. In this way, the author finds something new in the understanding of the novel. As in Hardy's other novels, symbolism in Jude the Obscure tends to be taken from nature and religion. Two symbols of major importance are Christminster and the character of Little Father Time. They are useful to discuss since the first is an instance of a successful symbol and the second an unsuccessful one.
Christminster-
Jude's idea of Christminster permeates not only his thinking but the whole novel. From his first view of it on the horizon to his hearing the sounds of the holiday there coming in his window as he lies on his deathbed, Christminster represents to him all that is desirable in life. It is by this idea that he measures everything. He encounters evidence in abundance that it is not in fact what he thinks it is in his imagination, but he will not take heed. It finally represents to him literally all that he has left in life. Of course, other characters as well are affected by Jude's idea of the place.
For Jude specifically, the city symbolizes not only knowledge, learning, and purity, but also his desire for a new life. After all, Jude grows up in a small town where his choices for the future are extremely limited. Think about his jobs along the way, before he makes the big move to the big city: he is an official, employed bird scarer (seriously—he's a living scarecrow); he works for his aunt the baker, and he picks up stonemasonry. These are all fine jobs (well, except maybe the scarecrow one), but not necessarily ideal for a young man who prizes learning above all else. It is a successful symbol because it is capable of representing what it is supposed to and it does not call attention to itself as a literary device.
'Jude the Obscure' strongly emphasizes Jude's intelligence, drive, and ambition. And it also strongly emphasizes the social forces that unfairly keep Jude out of the university and out of Christminster. As the physical symbol of the wealth and privilege that Jude seeks and fails to get, Christminster stands in for that larger, messed-up world that completely rejects Jude for daring to find ambition and hope while coming from the wrong side of the tracks.
Little Father Times-
“Don’t tell the child when he comes in,” whispered Sue nervously. “He’ll think it has all gone on the right, and it will be better that he should not be surprised and puzzled. Of course, it is only put off for reconsideration. If we are happy as we are, what does it matter to anybody?” - Sue Bridehead
The use of irony is of course commonplace in fiction, and a number of effective instances of it in Hardy's novel are to be found. In some instances, the reader but not the character recognizes the irony; in others, both the reader and the character are aware of it. An example of the first is Jude's occupational choice of ecclesiastical stonework in medieval Gothic style at a time when medievalism in architecture is dying out or the way Arabella alienates Jude by the deception she has used to get him to marry her the first time. An example of the second is Jude's dying in Christminster, the city that has symbolized all his hopes, or the way Arabella's calling on Jude in Aldbrickham in order to reawaken his interest in her helps bring about Sue's giving herself to him.
The irony is particularly appropriate in a novel of tragic intent, in which events do not work out the way the characters expect. Certainly, it is appropriate in a novel that has the kind of theme this one does. Struggling to break free of the old, the characters experience the old sufferings and failure nonetheless.
[Word Count- 1508]
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