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Thomas Hardy and desire: conceptions of the self

Abstract

Thomas Hardy and Desire employs a post-Lacanian approach to demonstrate the centrality of desire to Hardy's aesthetic project. Yearning, disappointment, frustration and loss determine the relationship of his characters and poetic personae to the world and the systems in which their sense of self is expressed and constituted. Yet his work also explores the positive, dynamic and productive dimension of desire. Structured around the themes of home and homelessness; eroticism; ‘Poor Men and Ladies' and social aspiration; cross dressing and gendered desire; the creation of ‘sapphic spaces'; aesthetic desire and its fulfilment in the achieved work of art, Thomas Hardy and Desire demonstrates Hardy's commitment, as an artist in pursuit of ‘a way to the better', to exploring how the energy of desire pushes beyond the boundaries of class, sexuality, gender and even language itself to bring new ways of being and doing into the realm of knowledge.

Citation

(2013). Thomas Hardy and desire: conceptions of the self. Palgrave Macmillan

Book Type Authored Book
Acceptance Date Mar 22, 2013
Publication Date Mar 22, 2013
ISBN 978-0-23022-463-6
Keywords Thomas Hardy;Desire;
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/405580

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