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India | Languages and Literature | Volume 14 Issue 6, June 2025 | Pages: 830 - 841
Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles: A Victim of Time, Class, and Moral Judgement
Abstract: This review is to examine the concept of Victorian morality and its influential portrayal through the thematic brilliance of Thomas Hardy?s Tess of the d?Urbervilles. During Queen Victoria?s prosperous reign, English society adhered to a rigid moral code known as Victorian morality: an ideology marked by restraint, intolerance toward deviation from religious or social norms, and a deeply entrenched belief in male domination. This framework, devoid of equality, dictated a strict code of conduct that applied disproportionately to women, enforcing an idealized and often unattainable standard of womanhood. All through the novel, Hardy criticises this moral structure and the society that sustains it, exposing its hypocrisy and double standards. Tess, as a character, is initially perceived through the lens of this morality as impure or fallen. Yet Hardy, through his third person narrative voice and compassionate portrayal, repeatedly justifies her actions and reframes her as a victim of social conventions and male exploitation. This tension is encapsulated in the novel?s subtitle: A Pure Woman Faithfully Presented. Tess is never truly immoral by any ethical standard; she is condemned not for her character, but for her circumstances.
Keywords: morality, Victorian era, code of conduct, ideal woman, societal convictions, double standards
How to Cite?: Dr. PR Chandra Reddy, P. Lokeshwari, "Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles: A Victim of Time, Class, and Moral Judgement", Volume 14 Issue 6, June 2025, International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR), Pages: 830-841, https://www.ijsr.net/getabstract.php?paperid=SR25610143520, DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.21275/SR25610143520
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