What is so Tragic About Tess?
by , 04-01-2010 at 10:45 PM (2259 Views)
I have just recently finished reading Tess of the d'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy, and first of all I just want to clarify that I did enjoy the book, and I found some of the prose to be quite lovely, though I know what I am about to say may sound like a mockery, and perhaps in a way it is, but it is done out of affection.
The problem is that I just could not take from the book what well everyone else does, and what a normal person would, and what Hardy intended, but I enjoyed it in my own unique way that perhaps only I could.
I found myself incapable of taking the book seriously as a tragedy, it did not throw me into a bit of despair of leave me feeling bleak and depresses, or move me. In my own personally reading experience it came off as a great Black Comedy.
There are a few reasons for this, of which I will explain.
~Warning~
Beyond this point there will be SPOILERS
First of all and perhaps one of the primary reasons why I did not read this book as a tragedy was because I found Tess to be an unsympathetic character.
*She gave in extremely easily to peer pressure, and pretty much would let anyone persuade her into doing anything.
*She spent a great deal of time feeling sorry for herself because she made terrible decision in her life.
*At the end she (as far as I am concerned) goes completely mad.
The book is subtitled "A Pure Woman" the fact that she in cold blood murders the man who has taken on the reasonability of taking care of her entire family when her douche bag deadbeat husband shows up feeling sorry for himself really puts a stain on the whole "purity" thing.
Granted Alec may have been a cad, and he would have deserved to have been killed at the beginning of the novel, but he repents his actions, makes an attempt to do the right thing towards Tess, takes on the duty that should have been Angel's from the beginning, and lifts her and her whole family out of the poverty that Angel cause her to be placed in, and she stabs him and blames him for the fact that she choose to marry him.
I really did not find her execution to be unjust, or even particularly tragic, since ultimately she did deserve it, by all rights she should have been executed.
The other main reason I could not take the book seriously as a tragedy is because the tragic elements were laid on so thick and it was so melodramatic and sensationalized, that there were moments that truly I just found to be completely laughable.
I personally do not see how others could truly find this book so "realistic" it was so over the top at times.
Also, am I the only one who found Tess trying to pimp her sister out to Angel a bit disconcerting to say the least?
For one thing Angel did not prove to be the greatest husband in the world and for another, I guess what Liza-Lu might want or how she might feel about this really doesn't matter at all.



