Saturday, July 20, 2019
Women play victims in Thomas Hardyââ¬â¢s short stories, roles that were Ess
Women play victims in Thomas Hardyââ¬â¢s short stories, roles that were   typical of Victorian women in general    ââ¬Å"Women play victims in Thomas Hardyââ¬â¢s short stories, roles that were  typical of Victorian women in generalâ⬠ Discuss with references at  least three of Hardyââ¬â¢s short stories    Thomas Hardy in his short stories ââ¬Å"The Withered Armâ⬠, ââ¬Å"Tony Kytes, the  Arch Deceiverâ⬠ and the Winters and the Palmleysâ⬠ presents his readers  with a series of unsettling visions of the relations between men and  women, women mainly coming worse off. For example Rhoda of ââ¬Å"The  Withered Armâ⬠, the poor outcast milkmaid, not even respected by her  own son, or pretty Harriet Palmley, the wolf in sheepââ¬â¢s clothing, evil  due to her education, therefore not a victim, but instead a horrible  person. Gertrude also, a good, obedient, ââ¬Å"rosy cheeked titsy-totsy  little body enoughâ⬠ until she gets her arm withered from a curse that  drives her to desperation to find a cure for the ââ¬Å"disfigurementâ⬠. All  these women, due to the fact that theyââ¬â¢re female, all ended off worse  off and in the course of this essay I am going to analyse whether his  female characters were victims or merely women of their time.    Hardyââ¬â¢s stories, mainly set 50 years before they were written, are set  mostly in the 1830ââ¬â¢s period of Victorian Britain, when women were  considered lower than men and didnââ¬â¢t usually get any rights or  education, especially in the rural areas such as Wessex, where Hardy's  ââ¬Å"Wessex Talesâ⬠ where set. Women were also oppressed in the way of not  being allowed high place jobs, the vote and certainly not a place in  Parliament or anything that might change Britain in any way, which was  quite ironic considering Britain was being ruled by Queen Victoria, a  women h...              ...herself. The other two, Unity and Hannah are in the same  boat in the way that they both want to steal Tony away from Milly but  when it comes to Tony actually asking them to marry him they both  refuse out of pride. They are not victims but women of their time, so  they do not gain my pity, as thatââ¬â¢s just the way it was. As for the  male characters such as Lodge, who dies peacefully of old age, leaving  most of his money to a reformatory for boys after being the main  victimiser and Tony Kytes also, after humiliating Milly totally and  having a happy ending is unfair considering what happened to all the  women. I think Hardy does exaggerate the victimisation of the women  and praise the men in his stories and I do feel sympathy for the  majority of the women but as for the rights, characters and education  of all the women, thatââ¬â¢s them just being women of their time.                      
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