Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy (1895)
Jude Fawley, a self-taught stonemason, dreams of studying at the university of Christminster (Oxford) but is thwarted at every turn by class, convention, and his own disastrous relationships. Hardy's darkest and most controversial novel.
Historical Significance:
The critical reaction to Jude the Obscure was so savage that Hardy never wrote another novel. The Bishop of Wakefield burned his copy. Critics called it "Jude the Obscene" for its frank treatment of sexuality, marriage, and the hypocrisy of the church. Hardy was devastated and spent the remaining 33 years of his life writing poetry instead. The novel's attack on the class barriers to education, its sympathetic portrayal of divorce and free love, and the horrifying fate of the children made it genuinely shocking in 1895. Modern readers recognize it as Hardy's most powerful and prophetic work.
This public domain classic was originally published in 1895. Free to read and share.
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