Daily schedule
Seminars meet each weekday morning after breakfast.
After lunch, afternoons are free for individual study or exploring the many places of interest in and around the city. Optional plenary excursions and social activities including walking tours will also be available.
The course fee includes breakfasts Monday-Saturday (residential guests only), lunches Sunday-Friday, and three-course dinners Sunday-Thursday. All meals are taken in Christ Church’s spectacular dining hall.
On Friday, there will be a special four-course gala dinner to celebrate the closing of the week.
Seminars
Monday seminars
An introduction to Thomas Hardy, Hardy ‘country’, and the author’s attitudes towards the lives of men and women in rural Dorset in the nineteenth century.
This session will also include a first analysis of Hardy’s Tess of the d’Urbervilles (1892).
Tuesday seminars
We will examine the book that made Thomas Hardy both famous and infamous: Tess of the d’Urbervilles (1892). The character of Tess made evident the tragic effects of sexual injustice in late Victorian England.
Wednesday seminars
Hardy’s The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) will present a chance to examine Hardy’s male protagonists and within it, the ramifications of Michael Henchard's decision to sell his wife and child during a drunken rage.
Thursday seminars
Hardy’s Gothic short story The Withered Arm (1888) followed the life of a poor female farm worker, Rhoda Brook, twelve years after the end of her relationship with a man called Farmer Lodge.
Friday seminars
Hardy seems always to have rated poetry above fiction, and this session will investigate some of his better-received poetry.