Friday, July 19, 2019
Hardys Presentation of Bathsheba and Fannys Experiences in Far from t
Hardy's Presentation of Bathsheba and Fanny's Experiences in Far from the Madding Crowd    How does this novel reveal the social reality of the time?    In this essay I will look at Thomas Hardy's 'Far from the Madding  Crowd' in the first section, I will look at the different ways Hardy  portrays Bathsheba and Fanny's experiences. Since Hardy based this  novel in the 1840s, and being true to history, it does reveal a lot  about the social reality of the time. However, Hardy could have a  different perspective, as he is writing in the 1870s, which may have  affected his view on the 1840s social ideal.    Fanny is offered almost as a complete contrast to Bathsheba Fanny  wants to get married (though this could possibly be because she is  pregnant), she has no money, no home and no family, while Bathsheba  has everything (except the family) that Fanny doesn't have, including  her boyfriend too, Troy.    Bathsheba at the beginning represents a very rare kind of Victorian  woman, one who is proud, strong and independent. While Fanny is the  naÃÆ'Ã ¯ve and 'fallen' woman. As you progress through the novel, you see a  peculiar change coming over both women, they seem to change their  characters, Bathsheba becoming more like Fanny, and Fanny becoming  more like Bathsheba. Fanny shows her strength as she almost pulls  herself down the road by the will of her mind, 'holding onto the rail  she advanced, thrusting one hand forward, then the other, leaning over  it whilst she dragged her feet on beneath' a lesser woman would have  just sat down and given up, but she shows us her strength of character  as she tricks her body into making the steps, that would take her ever  nearer, to her death, so to speak.. Bathsheba however, allows herself  to b...              ... Even through the action of the characters,  especially the males, you can see how difficult it was for a female in  the 1840's society, the stir Bathsheba cause when she walks into the  farmers market 'for at her first entry the lumbering dialogues had  ceased, nearly every face turned towards her' and again at the farmers  market your attention is brought to the fact she is the only woman  there 'the single one of her sex that the room contained' a sign that  woman were not readily accepted in the farming world, or any place  that had money as its bases.    So in conclusion to be a woman in 1840's based on Hardy's description  would have been a very trying experience, a woman's role was to be  dressed up in pretty clothes and displayed, never to do anything but  sit at home and do the needle work, never to go and try something  different. To be seen and not heard.                        
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