Tom Jones by Henry Fielding
Tom Jones is very
long novel by Henry Fielding. Here i am talking about only themes rather than
plot.
·
Virtue as action rather than thought
·
The tension between art and artifice
·
The impossibility of stereotypical categorization
1. Virtue as action
rather than thought
Fielding contrasts the
concept of Virtue espoused by characters like Square and Thwackum with the
Virtue actually practiced by Jones and Allworthy. Tom, as the active hero who saves damsels-in-distress
and plans on fighting for his country, is the embodiment of the very active
type of Virtue that Fielding esteems
2. The tension
between art and artifice
Although the narrator
upholds the value of natural art in his characters, he uses artifice himself in
the construction of his novel. For example, he often closes chapters by hinting
to the reader what is to follow in the next chapter, or he warns the reader
that he is going to omit a scene. In such a way, he prevents us from suspending
our disbelief and giving ourselves up to the "art" of the
narrative—instead, Fielding constantly entices us to reflect on and review the
process of construction.
3. The impossibility of stereotypical categorization
Fielding's novel attempts to break down numerous boundaries.
In terms of genre, Fielding cannot decide whether his novel is a
"philosophical History," a "Romance," or an
"epi-comic prosaic poem." Yet, through these confounded musings,
Fielding subtly suggests that cataloguing fiction is silly, and that he would
rather think of himself as "the founder of a new Province of
Writing."
In another example of broken stereotypes, Fielding's characters
cannot be distinguished by "masculine" or "feminine"
traits: in this novel both men and women fight and cry.
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