SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 20
by Thomas
the
d’Urbevi
Thomas Hardy
Life &
Works•He was born in Upper Bockhampton near
Dorchester in the South Wessex (1840)
•By 1862 he was working and studying architecture
in London. He began to write poetry at this time
•He became famous thanks to Far From the Madding
Crowd (1874)
•His second great work was The return of native
(1878)
• Then he wrote four tragic novels: The Mayor of
Casterbridge, The Woodlanders, Tess of the
d’Urbevilles and Jude the Obscure
•Victorian public opinion is scandalized by his novels
and he turned to write poetry.
•He died in 1928 and was buried in Poet’s corner in
Westminster Abbey
The stucture
Tess of d’Urbevilles is a novel first published in 1891. It initially
appeared in a censored and serialised version, published by
the British illustrated newspaper, The Graphic. Then it was published
complete, in three volumes. It is structured in seven phases:
The Maiden
Maiden no more
The Rally
The Consequence
The Woman pays
The Convert
Fulfilment
The plot
Tess Durbeyfield is the oldest
daughter of a lazy farmer in
Marlott.
Her father discovers he is the
heir of an old, rich family, the
d'Urbervilles.
Tess' mother knows where one d'Urbervilles family still lives,
and sends Tess to them.
Tess is no more than 16, but looks much older. While
working for d’Urbevilles Tess meets Alec, the son of Mrs.
D’Urbevilles. He takes advantage of her and she gets
pregnant.
There she falls in love with Angel Clare
and they decide to marry…
Alec finds her again and he persuades her to live
with him, even if she's legally married to Angel…
Suddenly Angel Clare returns back and
he finds her at home with Alec…
And Tess makes him go away because it
was too late for staying together…
Then Tess is captured at Stonehenge and executed
as murderer. Angel marries her younger
sister, Liza Lu as Tess wished.
The major
characters
Tess d’Urbevilles
Tess is surely the central character of
the novel. Hardy makes her a heroine.
Her name, formally Theresa, recalls
St. Teresa of Avila, another martyr
whose vision of a higher reality costs
her life. In part, Tess represents the
changing role of the agricultural
workers in England in the late
nineteenth century.
Beyond her social symbolism, Tess represents fallen humanity in a
religious sense ,she is the myth of the humans who suffer for crimes that
are not their own.
Angel Clare
The son of a parson and the
youngest of three brothers, he does
not enter college despite his superior
intellect. He wants to study
agriculture so that he might become
a farmer. Angel Clare is nevertheless
dogmatic and stubborn. He has a
deeply theoretical mindset; it is this
quality that makes him reject Tess
when he learns she is a fallen
woman, because that contradicts
his idealistic view of her.
Alec Strokes
Alec is rapacious and possessive,
believing that his status in society and
his financial situation give him the
power to possess and control Tess after
he gives her a job caring for his mother's
chickens. Alec is a hedonistic dandy but
after seducing Tess he becomes
“christian” for a while. When he sees
Tess once more he is obsessed by her
another time.
The sophisticated, urbane son of the blind Mrs. Stoke-d'Urberville.
The Victorian Era is characterized by a very strict morality,
particularly concerning the relationship between men and women. A
woman was still the property of her husband or father, and her honour
was to be protected until marriage. Also at this time, the Industrial
Revolution had changed the economy significantly and even the most
rural areas witnessed some kind of mechanization. Hardy reports this
technological progress while describing some strange machines such as
the reaping-machine
It was a horse-drawn
machine used in
reaping grain and
typically equipped
with a raking device
that bends the grain
against the cutter bar,
then the grain cut was
picked up manually.
The style
Hardy’s writing style is quite simple. He describes the
scenery in great details, with a cinematic technique.
Moreover thanks to the use of the dialect he can
increase the realism of his novel.
The narrator
Hardy uses the sympathetic inside view that is to say he is
an internal narrator that describes the facts through the
eyes of some character, in this case Tess, Angel Clare and
Alec.
References to Verga:
Hardy’s masterpiece is full of deterministic pessimism
as well as I Malavoglia by Giovanni Verga.
In their works through coincidences and changes
they show that everything happened because it was
to be and there’s anything you can do to control your
destiny.
The characters accept their condition stoically and
with dignity.
Moreover they both show the hard country life of their
time from a realistic point of view.
Some Curiosities
The May-Day dance. It’s a pagan ritual celebrating the fertility of
nature. Women dance in circles wearing white dresses, they decorate
their hair with red ribbons and flowers.
Tess and Angel
Clare first met
at the
May-Day dance.
Angel danced
with almost
everyone except
Tess… (chapter 2)
 Stonehenge according to Hardy was a pagan sacrifical altar.
Here Tess is captured by police, but as a heroine who accepts her
destiny.
At Stonehenge Tess
and her lover Angel
Clare can stay
together for the
last time…
 The producer Roman Polanski had
made up a film inspired to Hardy’s novel.
Moreover there are two tv-series of the
BBC about Tess’ misfortunes.

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Themes: Pride and Prejudice
Themes: Pride and PrejudiceThemes: Pride and Prejudice
Themes: Pride and Prejudice
Emma Sinclair
 
The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot
The Waste Land by T.S. EliotThe Waste Land by T.S. Eliot
The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot
Dilip Barad
 
GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)
GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)
GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)
hdralipak
 

Mais procurados (20)

Heart of Darkness ppt
Heart of Darkness pptHeart of Darkness ppt
Heart of Darkness ppt
 
Theme of tess [autosaved]
Theme of tess [autosaved]Theme of tess [autosaved]
Theme of tess [autosaved]
 
The way of the world
The way of the worldThe way of the world
The way of the world
 
Presentation on W B Yeats
Presentation on W B YeatsPresentation on W B Yeats
Presentation on W B Yeats
 
The rape of the lock
The rape of the lockThe rape of the lock
The rape of the lock
 
TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES
TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES
TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES
 
Themes: Pride and Prejudice
Themes: Pride and PrejudiceThemes: Pride and Prejudice
Themes: Pride and Prejudice
 
To the lighthouse by Woolf
To the lighthouse by WoolfTo the lighthouse by Woolf
To the lighthouse by Woolf
 
Ts Eliot
Ts EliotTs Eliot
Ts Eliot
 
Sons and lovers
Sons and loversSons and lovers
Sons and lovers
 
The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot
The Waste Land by T.S. EliotThe Waste Land by T.S. Eliot
The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot
 
GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)
GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)
GEOFFREY CHAUCER 91343-1400)
 
gothic novel
gothic novelgothic novel
gothic novel
 
Features ofModern drama
Features ofModern dramaFeatures ofModern drama
Features ofModern drama
 
Heart of Darkness
Heart of DarknessHeart of Darkness
Heart of Darkness
 
Tradition and individual talent
Tradition and individual talentTradition and individual talent
Tradition and individual talent
 
To the lighthouse, Summary,themes, symbols and modernism
To the lighthouse, Summary,themes, symbols and modernismTo the lighthouse, Summary,themes, symbols and modernism
To the lighthouse, Summary,themes, symbols and modernism
 
Symbolism in Virginia Woolf's 'To The Lighthouse'
Symbolism in Virginia Woolf's 'To The Lighthouse'Symbolism in Virginia Woolf's 'To The Lighthouse'
Symbolism in Virginia Woolf's 'To The Lighthouse'
 
Philip sidney an apology for poetry
Philip sidney an apology for poetryPhilip sidney an apology for poetry
Philip sidney an apology for poetry
 
Sir Philip Sidney's Defence of Poesie
Sir Philip Sidney's Defence of PoesieSir Philip Sidney's Defence of Poesie
Sir Philip Sidney's Defence of Poesie
 

Semelhante a Tess of the d’Urbevilles

Thomas hardy ana ortiz
Thomas hardy ana ortizThomas hardy ana ortiz
Thomas hardy ana ortiz
Ana
 
Thomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPoint
Thomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPointThomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPoint
Thomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPoint
YasirAslam20
 
History of novels
History of novelsHistory of novels
History of novels
nn555818
 
Thomas hardy gema villena
Thomas hardy  gema villenaThomas hardy  gema villena
Thomas hardy gema villena
Ana
 

Semelhante a Tess of the d’Urbevilles (17)

Thomas hardy ana ortiz
Thomas hardy ana ortizThomas hardy ana ortiz
Thomas hardy ana ortiz
 
Tess as tragedy
Tess as tragedyTess as tragedy
Tess as tragedy
 
The tale of two cities :Synopsis
The tale of two cities :Synopsis The tale of two cities :Synopsis
The tale of two cities :Synopsis
 
Tess of the d'urbervillies and Jane Eyre
Tess of the d'urbervillies and Jane Eyre Tess of the d'urbervillies and Jane Eyre
Tess of the d'urbervillies and Jane Eyre
 
TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES summary ,characters and Themes
TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES summary ,characters and ThemesTESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES summary ,characters and Themes
TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES summary ,characters and Themes
 
Thomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPoint
Thomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPointThomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPoint
Thomas Hardy.pdf Slides presentation PowerPoint
 
VICTORAIN AGE AND THOMAS HARDY
VICTORAIN AGE AND THOMAS HARDYVICTORAIN AGE AND THOMAS HARDY
VICTORAIN AGE AND THOMAS HARDY
 
The Return of the Native Presented by Monir Hossen
The Return of the Native Presented by Monir Hossen The Return of the Native Presented by Monir Hossen
The Return of the Native Presented by Monir Hossen
 
Thackeray
ThackerayThackeray
Thackeray
 
Historical fiction v3
Historical fiction v3Historical fiction v3
Historical fiction v3
 
History of novels
History of novelsHistory of novels
History of novels
 
The Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy
The Return of the Native by Thomas HardyThe Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy
The Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy
 
Elit 46 c class 9
Elit 46 c class 9Elit 46 c class 9
Elit 46 c class 9
 
Thomas hardy gema villena
Thomas hardy  gema villenaThomas hardy  gema villena
Thomas hardy gema villena
 
Novels society and history
Novels society and historyNovels society and history
Novels society and history
 
A tale of two cities
A tale of two citiesA tale of two cities
A tale of two cities
 
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens Analysis
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens AnalysisA Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens Analysis
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens Analysis
 

Mais de IISS "Quinto Orazio Flacco"

Mais de IISS "Quinto Orazio Flacco" (20)

Basic personal questions
Basic personal questionsBasic personal questions
Basic personal questions
 
The present simple object pronouns
The present simple   object pronounsThe present simple   object pronouns
The present simple object pronouns
 
Verb 'to be', numbers, plurals, pronouns
Verb 'to be', numbers, plurals, pronounsVerb 'to be', numbers, plurals, pronouns
Verb 'to be', numbers, plurals, pronouns
 
Verb 'to be' professions
Verb 'to be' professionsVerb 'to be' professions
Verb 'to be' professions
 
The past
The pastThe past
The past
 
Prepositions of time
Prepositions of timePrepositions of time
Prepositions of time
 
Possessive s to have
Possessive s to havePossessive s to have
Possessive s to have
 
Modifiers
ModifiersModifiers
Modifiers
 
Days and daily routines
Days and daily routinesDays and daily routines
Days and daily routines
 
Countable uncountable nouns
Countable uncountable nounsCountable uncountable nouns
Countable uncountable nouns
 
Can (ability)
Can (ability)Can (ability)
Can (ability)
 
Adjectives for feelings
Adjectives for feelingsAdjectives for feelings
Adjectives for feelings
 
Jane Eyre
Jane EyreJane Eyre
Jane Eyre
 
The Scarlet Letter
The Scarlet LetterThe Scarlet Letter
The Scarlet Letter
 
George Orwell
George OrwellGeorge Orwell
George Orwell
 
Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde
Dr Jekyll & Mr HydeDr Jekyll & Mr Hyde
Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde
 
A passage to India
A passage to IndiaA passage to India
A passage to India
 
Heart of darkness di Joseph Conrad
Heart of darkness di Joseph ConradHeart of darkness di Joseph Conrad
Heart of darkness di Joseph Conrad
 
The adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The adventures of Huckleberry FinnThe adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The adventures of Huckleberry Finn
 
Look back in anger
Look back in angerLook back in anger
Look back in anger
 

Último

An Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdf
An Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdfAn Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdf
An Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdf
SanaAli374401
 
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
QucHHunhnh
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
ciinovamais
 

Último (20)

Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
 
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
 
An Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdf
An Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdfAn Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdf
An Overview of Mutual Funds Bcom Project.pdf
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
 
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
 
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptxUnit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
 
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin ClassesMixin Classes in Odoo 17  How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
Mixin Classes in Odoo 17 How to Extend Models Using Mixin Classes
 
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
 
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot GraphZ Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
Z Score,T Score, Percential Rank and Box Plot Graph
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
 
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introductionmicrowave assisted reaction. General introduction
microwave assisted reaction. General introduction
 
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
 
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
PROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docxPROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docx
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
 
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
 
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
 
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SDMeasures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
 
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdfClass 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
Class 11th Physics NEET formula sheet pdf
 

Tess of the d’Urbevilles

  • 2. Thomas Hardy Life & Works•He was born in Upper Bockhampton near Dorchester in the South Wessex (1840) •By 1862 he was working and studying architecture in London. He began to write poetry at this time •He became famous thanks to Far From the Madding Crowd (1874) •His second great work was The return of native (1878) • Then he wrote four tragic novels: The Mayor of Casterbridge, The Woodlanders, Tess of the d’Urbevilles and Jude the Obscure •Victorian public opinion is scandalized by his novels and he turned to write poetry. •He died in 1928 and was buried in Poet’s corner in Westminster Abbey
  • 3. The stucture Tess of d’Urbevilles is a novel first published in 1891. It initially appeared in a censored and serialised version, published by the British illustrated newspaper, The Graphic. Then it was published complete, in three volumes. It is structured in seven phases: The Maiden Maiden no more The Rally The Consequence The Woman pays The Convert Fulfilment
  • 4. The plot Tess Durbeyfield is the oldest daughter of a lazy farmer in Marlott. Her father discovers he is the heir of an old, rich family, the d'Urbervilles. Tess' mother knows where one d'Urbervilles family still lives, and sends Tess to them.
  • 5. Tess is no more than 16, but looks much older. While working for d’Urbevilles Tess meets Alec, the son of Mrs. D’Urbevilles. He takes advantage of her and she gets pregnant.
  • 6. There she falls in love with Angel Clare and they decide to marry…
  • 7. Alec finds her again and he persuades her to live with him, even if she's legally married to Angel…
  • 8. Suddenly Angel Clare returns back and he finds her at home with Alec… And Tess makes him go away because it was too late for staying together…
  • 9. Then Tess is captured at Stonehenge and executed as murderer. Angel marries her younger sister, Liza Lu as Tess wished.
  • 11. Tess d’Urbevilles Tess is surely the central character of the novel. Hardy makes her a heroine. Her name, formally Theresa, recalls St. Teresa of Avila, another martyr whose vision of a higher reality costs her life. In part, Tess represents the changing role of the agricultural workers in England in the late nineteenth century. Beyond her social symbolism, Tess represents fallen humanity in a religious sense ,she is the myth of the humans who suffer for crimes that are not their own.
  • 12. Angel Clare The son of a parson and the youngest of three brothers, he does not enter college despite his superior intellect. He wants to study agriculture so that he might become a farmer. Angel Clare is nevertheless dogmatic and stubborn. He has a deeply theoretical mindset; it is this quality that makes him reject Tess when he learns she is a fallen woman, because that contradicts his idealistic view of her.
  • 13. Alec Strokes Alec is rapacious and possessive, believing that his status in society and his financial situation give him the power to possess and control Tess after he gives her a job caring for his mother's chickens. Alec is a hedonistic dandy but after seducing Tess he becomes “christian” for a while. When he sees Tess once more he is obsessed by her another time. The sophisticated, urbane son of the blind Mrs. Stoke-d'Urberville.
  • 14. The Victorian Era is characterized by a very strict morality, particularly concerning the relationship between men and women. A woman was still the property of her husband or father, and her honour was to be protected until marriage. Also at this time, the Industrial Revolution had changed the economy significantly and even the most rural areas witnessed some kind of mechanization. Hardy reports this technological progress while describing some strange machines such as the reaping-machine
  • 15. It was a horse-drawn machine used in reaping grain and typically equipped with a raking device that bends the grain against the cutter bar, then the grain cut was picked up manually.
  • 16. The style Hardy’s writing style is quite simple. He describes the scenery in great details, with a cinematic technique. Moreover thanks to the use of the dialect he can increase the realism of his novel. The narrator Hardy uses the sympathetic inside view that is to say he is an internal narrator that describes the facts through the eyes of some character, in this case Tess, Angel Clare and Alec.
  • 17. References to Verga: Hardy’s masterpiece is full of deterministic pessimism as well as I Malavoglia by Giovanni Verga. In their works through coincidences and changes they show that everything happened because it was to be and there’s anything you can do to control your destiny. The characters accept their condition stoically and with dignity. Moreover they both show the hard country life of their time from a realistic point of view.
  • 18. Some Curiosities The May-Day dance. It’s a pagan ritual celebrating the fertility of nature. Women dance in circles wearing white dresses, they decorate their hair with red ribbons and flowers. Tess and Angel Clare first met at the May-Day dance. Angel danced with almost everyone except Tess… (chapter 2)
  • 19.  Stonehenge according to Hardy was a pagan sacrifical altar. Here Tess is captured by police, but as a heroine who accepts her destiny. At Stonehenge Tess and her lover Angel Clare can stay together for the last time…
  • 20.  The producer Roman Polanski had made up a film inspired to Hardy’s novel. Moreover there are two tv-series of the BBC about Tess’ misfortunes.