Hardy was a poet of ghosts. In his poetry he describes himself as posthumous; as rekindling the cinders of passion; as the guardian of the dead forgotten by history; and as haunted by ghosts, particularly the spectre of the lost child (as in the rumour that he fathered a child in the 1860s). Using Derrida, Abraham and Torok and other theorists, and referring to Victorian debates on materialism, this book investigates ghostliness, historicity and memory in Hardy's poetry.Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction Supplementarity The Ghosts of Thought The Child in Time The Politics of the Dead History, Catastrophe, Typology Mourning and Intertextuality Notes Index
'Haunted Hardy is a product of much solid scholarship...a welcome addition to...the discussion of Hardy's poetry.' - English Language Teaching
TIM ARMSTRONG is Reader in Modern English and American Literature at Royal Holloway University of London. He is the author of
Modernism, Technology and the Body (1998), has edited
Thomas Hardy: Selected Poems (1993),
American Bodies (1996) and co-edited
Beyond the Pleasure Dome: Writing and Addiction from the Romantics (1994).