This blog is written as a task assigned by the head of the Department of English (MKBU), Prof. and Dr. Dilip Barad Sir. Here is the link to the professor's blog for background reading:Click here
Thomas Hardy:
Thomas Hardy (1840–1928) was a prominent English novelist and poet, widely regarded as one of the most important literary figures of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Born in Higher Bockhampton, a small village in Dorset, Hardy was deeply influenced by the rural landscapes and traditions of southwest England, which feature prominently in his work under the fictional name "Wessex."
Hardy began his career as an architect before turning to literature. He first gained recognition as a novelist with works such as Far from the Madding Crowd (1874), and went on to publish a series of powerful and often controversial novels, including The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886), Tess of the d’Urbervilles (1891), and Jude the Obscure (1895).
His novels often explore themes of social constraint, class, gender, religion, and the individual’s struggle against fate, reflecting a deep pessimism about the human condition. Hardy's realistic portrayal of rural life and his critique of Victorian society made him both celebrated and criticized in his time Jude the Obscure in particular caused public outrage for its frank treatment of sexuality, marriage, and religion.
Following the negative reception of Jude, Hardy abandoned fiction and devoted the rest of his life to poetry, producing several acclaimed volumes that cemented his reputation as a major poet of the modern era. Thomas Hardy died in 1928, leaving behind a literary legacy that profoundly shaped English literature. His works continue to be studied for their psychological depth, social critique, and poetic style.
Q | 1. Structure of the Novel 'Jude the Obscure'
Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure remains one of the most powerful and unsettling novels of the Victorian period. In a recent YouTube lecture, the speaker provides a compelling analysis of the novel’s structure and thematic core, particularly focusing on the emotional and philosophical journey of its two central characters Jude Fawley and Sue Bridehead.
At the heart of Hardy’s narrative is what the lecture identifies as a “reversal of belief.” At the beginning of the novel, Sue embodies secularism, rationalism, and modern intellectual freedom, challenging religious conventions and traditional morality. Jude, in contrast, starts as a character rooted in Christian ideals, holding deep respect for religious structures and traditional values. However, as the story unfolds, their beliefs gradually invert. Jude becomes increasingly disillusioned with the institutions he once admired education, religion, and marriage while Sue, shattered by personal tragedy, turns towards a self-denying religiosity, almost fanatically seeking redemption through suffering.
This philosophical and emotional reversal forms a critical part of the novel’s structure, which is organized around the rise and fall of Jude and Sue’s relationship. Rather than a linear progression, the narrative mimics the instability and turbulence of their inner lives, marked by shifting ideals, personal failures, and societal resistance. Their relationship serves as the emotional and thematic axis of the story, symbolizing what the lecture calls the “tragedy of unfulfilled aims.”
Jude’s dream of becoming a scholar at Christminster (a fictional version of Oxford) is systematically crushed by rigid class structures and elitist academic institutions. Similarly, Sue’s attempts to live freely outside the constraints of marriage and religion are eventually overcome by guilt, social pressure, and emotional collapse. Hardy uses their relationship to critique the societal conventions of Victorian England, particularly in the areas of marriage, morality, and the role of women.
The lecture also draws attention to the religious and irreligious elements that permeate the characters’ decisions and actions. Jude’s consistent compassion, humility, and quiet endurance stand in contrast to Sue’s earlier rejection of religion and later, her descent into guilt-ridden religiosity. This spiritual tension within and between the characters reflects Hardy’s own complex relationship with faith and skepticism. The novel explores what happens when individual desire, modern thought, and institutional religion collide, often with devastating consequences.
Ultimately, the speaker frames Jude the Obscure as more than just a tragic love story. It is a deep philosophical meditation on failure not just personal failure, but the failure of society to adapt to changing human needs. Hardy presents a world where progress comes at the cost of spiritual emptiness, and where societal norms stifle rather than support human potential. This makes the novel a powerful critique of modernity, illustrating what the lecture terms the “debilitating effects of the Modern Spirit.”
In conclusion, Hardy’s Jude the Obscure is structured around the emotional evolution and eventual collapse of its protagonists. Through the reversal of their beliefs and the intense scrutiny of societal institutions, the novel challenges readers to confront uncomfortable questions about faith, freedom, and the limits of progress. As the lecture insightfully argues, it is this combination of personal tragedy and social critique that makes Hardy’s work so enduring and so unsettling.
Q | 2. Research Article - Symbolic Indictment of Christianity - Norman Holland Jr. | Uni. of California
Here’s a detailed summary and commentary on Norman Holland, Jr.’s article “’Jude the Obscure’: Hardy’s Symbolic Indictment of Christianity” (1954), from Nineteenth‑Century Fiction. I’ll cover its main arguments, key evidence, strengths, and some possible criticisms. You can use this for blog posts, papers, or class discussion.
In “’Jude the Obscure’: Hardy’s Symbolic Indictment of Christianity,” Norman Holland, Jr. argues that Jude the Obscure functions not just as a tragic novel, but as a symbolic critique of Christianity especially the institutional and moral strictures that Christianity placed on individual lives in Victorian England.
Here are the main points Holland makes:
1. Christianity as an Overbearing Moral System :
Hardy is seen to depict Christianity not merely as a faith or personal belief system, but as an institution that imposes oppressive moral standards. These standards are shown to conflict with human desires, natural impulses, and the longing for freedom.
2. Symbols of Religion and Their Effects :
The article examines how Hardy uses symbols to represent aspects of Christianity its dogma, its rituals, its laws and how these symbols are constantly portrayed as limiting, life‑denying, or out of touch with human suffering and complexity.
3. Character Dynamics as Representation of Religious Conflict :
Jude and Sue serve as symbolic figures caught between conflicting demands of faith and individual autonomy. Jude begins with a more orthodox Christian vision (aspiring toward holy things, respect for spiritual authority), but becomes disillusioned. Sue, initially more skeptical or irreligious, is drawn into religious guilt and moral constraint later. Holland sees their reversal of belief (or at least their internal struggle) as part of Hardy’s indictment.
4. The Law vs. the Spirit :
A big part of Holland’s concern is the distinction between following “the letter” of Christian law (its rules, traditions, moral codes) and the spiritual or humane essence that might underlie Christian ideals. Hardy, Holland claims, is critical of the letter‑bound legalism: what Christianity demands in law and ritual often suppresses compassion, personal fulfillment, and honest human relationships.
5. Tragedy of Unfulfilled Aims :
Hardy’s novel, according to Holland, dramatizes how Christian expectations and social constraints set up ambitions in characters (education, spiritual fulfilment, meaningful relationships) that are almost destined to fail because of the pressures and hypocrisies inherent in Christian‑moral society.
6. Hardy’s Sympathetic but Critical Perspective :
Although Hardy criticizes Christianity (especially its institutional forms), Holland suggests Hardy is not wholly dismissing religion or faith. There is sympathy for the struggles of religious sentiment, especially where it springs from genuine moral yearning or human vulnerability. The indictment is symbolic showing the harm, not simply condemning people for their faith.
Key Evidence Holland Uses
To support his arguments, Holland draws on (though not exclusively, since the article is relatively succinct) several textual and symbolic moments in Jude the Obscure:
The epigraph of the novel (the reference to “the letter that killeth”) which sets up the idea that rigid Christian law can destroy what matters. Sue’s acquisition of pagan or pre‑Christian symbols (like buying figures of Venus or Apollo) early in the novel, which Holland uses to show her uneasy relationship with Christian orthodoxy. Jude’s dream of Christminster, his reverence for Christian ideals early on, followed by his disillusionment when those ideals clash with social class, human limitations, and cruelty.
The moral consequences Sue faces when she abandons conventional morality her guilt, her eventual clinging to Christian expectations. The failure of Jude’s educational and spiritual aspirations (rejection by the university, inability to fully integrate Christian ideals into life) as symbolic of Christianity’s failure to accommodate real human suffering and aspiration.
Strengths of Holland’s Reading:
Careful Symbolic Analysis: He pays good attention to how symbols function in the text, not just plot. This helps bring out under‑noticed elements.
Nuanced View: Holland doesn’t simply set Hardy up as an atheist with disdain; he sees ambivalence, sympathy, and complexity. This makes his critique more compelling.
Historical & Moral Context: The article situates Hardy’s critique in the moral culture of Victorian England where Christian norms were very powerful so the stakes of Hardy’s symbolic indictment become clearer.
Clarity of Focus: By centering on Christianity as both belief and institution, Holland gives us a lens to read Jude not just as a personal tragedy but as a social critique.
Criticisms or Limitations
Selective Evidence: Because the article is short, some of the more contradictory passages in Hardy are underexplored. Hardy’s treatment of religion is not entirely negative; there are moments where the spiritual or moral impulse is honored. Some readers feel Holland doesn’t give enough weight to those.
Generalization about “Christianity”: The article tends to treat Christianity in broad strokes the legal, moral, institutional side somewhat homogenously. Victorian Christianity was not monolithic: there were more liberal and progressive theologies, dissenters, and variations that might complicate Holland’s portrayal.
Hardy’s own Religious Position: Hardy’s own beliefs are complex agnostic, critical, reflective. Some critics argue that “indictment” overstates the case: rather than condemning Christianity wholesale, Hardy might be more interested in the tension between faith and human nature. So Holland’s thesis may lean a bit toward “Christianity is bad” more than Hardy intends.
Lack of attention to non‑Christian alternatives: Holland’s article focuses largely on Christian symbolic structures vs. human failure, but there is less discussion of how Hardy uses pagan, historical, aesthetic, or non‑religious ways of meaning. These are in the novel, and sometimes offer possible alternative values, however limited.
Q |3. Research Article - Bildungsroman & Jude the Obscure - Frank R. Giordano Jr. | John Hopkins Uni
Here’s a summary and discussion of Frank R. Giordano Jr.’s article “Jude the Obscure and the Bildungsroman” (Studies in the Novel, Winter 1972, Vol. 4, No. 4, pp. 580‑591) — plus some analysis of its arguments, strengths, and limitations.
What the article is about :
Giordano examines Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure in relation to the genre conventions of the Bildungsroman. That is, how the novel conforms to or departs from the typical “coming-of-age” narrative: the growth, moral/psychological formation of a young protagonist, usually from innocence toward experience, or from lower to higher social/intellectual status.
Key points Giordano makes:
1. Bildungsroman Structure Present But Subverted :
Hardy uses many of the structural markers of Bildungsroman: Jude starts with aspirations (especially intellectual), his longing for education, his journey toward Christminster (the symbolic university city analogous to Oxford) as a site of learning, self-improvement, and aspiration. Yet, these are subverted over time. Jude does not arrive at a stable sense of fulfillment or mastery; instead, his path is repeatedly blocked by social, economic, sexual, and moral constraints.
2. Ideal vs. Reality:
Jude’s idealism (his visions of education, of being “something better”) is in conflict with the harsh realities of his class, of poverty, of marriage conventions, and the educational system. Giordano stresses how Jude’s dreams are frustrated not simply by bad luck but by institutional and societal barriers.
3. Tragedy as Bildungsroman Turned Downward:
Unlike many Bildungsromans which end in integration, achievement, or reconciliation (even if imperfect), Jude the Obscure ends in tragedy. The novel thus acts as a critique or “anti‑Bildungsroman” in many respects. Jude’s maturation is accompanied not by growth to triumph, but by disillusionment, suffering, failure moral, intellectual, emotional. Sue Bridehead also serves as a counterpoint, her intellectual and emotional life offering both an escape and a further complication.
4. Psychological / Moral Development:
Giordano also looks at how Jude changes (or fails to change) in terms of values: the tension between marriage, morality, social respectability vs. personal authenticity; the way Jude adapts (or refuses to adapt), how his self‑understanding evolves (or deteriorates) under repeated disappointments.
5. Genre Implications:
The article explores what Hardy’s treatment of the Bildungsroman genre says: his critique of Victorian values such as the value of education, religious morality, class structure; and how the genre itself is under pressure in this novel to confront disillusionment, structural injustice, the limits of personal agency.
Strengths of Giordano’s Argument :
Close attention to genre conventions: Giordano shows good familiarity with what a “standard” Bildungsroman demands, allowing readers to see clearly how Hardy is working within, and then against, the form.
Textual evidence: He draws on specific events in Jude the Obscure to show how idealism gives way to frustration; how the external social reality (poverty, class, religion, marriage norms) constrains Jude’s ambitions.
Recognition of realism / tragedy: Instead of idealizing Jude, Giordano doesn’t shy from analyzing the tragic dimensions how Hardy's novel questions the possibility of upward intellectual mobility, stable identity formation, or moral resolution.
Blend of psychological, social, moral perspectives: The article is not just about plot but about what the novel suggests about human character, motives, disillusionment, and moral responsibility.
Limitations / Things to be Critical Of :
Possible over-emphasis on tragedy: One might argue that Giordano focuses strongly on failure and tragic outcomes, which risks underplaying moments of hope, resistance, or moral insight that are not purely negative. Jude the Obscure may not end happily, but there are moments where Jude’s ideals and aspirations are meaningful, even if they fail.
Limited attention to female character(s): The Bildungsroman is often thought of as centered on a male protagonist; Giordano’s reading is male‑centred, perhaps underplaying how Sue Bridehead also embodies aspects of development, rebellion, critique of social norms, and how her life interacts with the Bildungsroman form.
Historical context: While Giordano does discuss the social constraints of Victorian England, newer scholarship might argue for more nuanced or expanded context for example, gender, sexuality, class from different angles, colonialism, etc. Also changes in how later critics interpret the Bildungsroman, including queer or disability studies angles, might offer richer layers beyond what Giordano (1972) addresses.
Genre boundaries: The article treats Bildungsroman in somewhat traditional framework; more recent criticism might argue that Jude the Obscure is better understood alongside other modern or late‑Victorian experiments in subverting or fragmenting the Bildungsroman, not merely as a “failed” one.
How this connects with other scholarship :
There is later work (for example Reorienting the Bildungsroman: Progress Narratives, Queerness, and Disability in The History of Sir Richard Calmady and Jude the Obscure (2017)) that picks up on themes Giordano raised (failure, disillusionment) but adds layers of marginality, disability, queerness, etc.
Some critics treat Jude the Obscure explicitly as a tragic Bildungsroman (or anti‑Bildungsroman) and explore how Hardy uses the genre’s conventions only to subvert them. The Victorian Web essay also sees the novel as part Bildungsroman, part “New Woman” novel.
Q|4. Thematic Study of Jude the Obscure
1. Class and Education:
Hardy critiques the rigid Victorian class structure through Jude Fawley’s thwarted desire to rise above his working-class background. Jude's ambition to attend university at Christminster (based on Oxford) symbolizes his longing for intellectual and spiritual enrichment. However, his exclusion from higher education reveals the illusory nature of social mobility. Despite his academic self-discipline, Jude is dismissed by the university purely due to his low social status and lack of wealth.
This theme reflects Hardy's realist and naturalist tendencies he exposes how institutions perpetuate inequality and deny individual potential based on class. The education system, instead of being a tool of enlightenment, becomes an inaccessible fortress, available only to the elite.
Through Jude’s experience, Hardy dismantles the Victorian ideal of the "self-made man." Jude is a tragic figure not because he lacks talent or perseverance, but because he exists in a society designed to preserve class divisions.
2. Religion and Morality:
Hardy engages in a profound critique of institutional religion, portraying it as both morally hypocritical and emotionally oppressive. At the beginning of the novel, Jude is drawn to the Church, imagining it as a bastion of truth and moral goodness. He even considers becoming a clergyman. However, as his life becomes more complicated particularly through his relationships with Arabella and Sue - he becomes disillusioned with the Church's inflexibility and judgmental stance.
Sue Bridehead embodies Hardy’s skepticism of organized religion. Though she is spiritually inclined and morally conscientious, she finds the doctrines of Christianity to be incompatible with her emotional needs and intellectual freedom. However, after the tragic death of her children, she internalizes religious guilt, returning to a traditional, ascetic lifestyle as a form of self-punishment. This regression reflects the destructive psychological effects of religious dogma, especially on women.
Hardy presents a world where religious morality fails to address human suffering, instead reinforcing repression and social exclusion. His view is deeply deterministic: religion, instead of being a source of redemption, becomes a mechanism of control and despair.
3. Marriage, Sexuality, and Social Convention:
Hardy deconstructs Victorian ideals of marriage and sexuality, portraying legal marriage not as a sacred institution but as a social contract that often leads to misery. Jude and Arabella’s early marriage is based on deceit and lust, while Sue’s marriage to Phillotson is driven by social expectation rather than love. Both unions prove disastrous.
Jude and Sue attempt to live together outside of marriage a radical choice in Victorian society. However, their cohabitation results in social ostracism and personal anguish, especially after Sue’s guilt reasserts itself. Hardy reveals the discrepancy between personal morality and societal norms, showing how the law can be indifferent or even hostile to emotional truth.
Sue’s sexual aversion and intellectualized views on love present a challenge to Victorian gender roles. Yet Hardy doesn’t portray her as liberated rather, she is psychologically conflicted, a victim of societal conditioning and internalized shame.
Marriage, in Hardy’s view, is often a trap used by society to control sexuality and enforce conformity. He argues for greater flexibility in human relationships, yet he also shows how difficult it is to resist social pressure.
4. Fatalism and Tragedy:
One of the most pervasive themes in the novel is Hardy’s fatalism the idea that human beings are at the mercy of forces they cannot control. These forces include social norms, biology, heredity, chance, and institutional power. The characters, especially Jude and Sue, make choices, but their outcomes are tragically inevitable.
Hardy uses foreshadowing, symbolism, and bleak imagery to create an atmosphere of doom. For example, the death of the children, particularly by the hands of "Little Father Time," signifies the crushing weight of societal disapproval and despair. The child’s act motivated by the perception that life is too burdensome epitomizes Hardy’s deterministic worldview.
Even acts of rebellion, like Sue’s rejection of marriage or Jude’s defiance of social expectations, are ultimately futile. Hardy seems to suggest that individuals cannot transcend the tragic patterns of their lives, which are shaped more by environment and circumstance than by will.
5. Individual vs. Society:
Hardy positions the individual in direct conflict with societal norms, particularly through Jude and Sue’s attempts to live according to their own moral codes. Their decisions to reject traditional marriage, pursue intellectual dreams, or live freely are met with severe social punishment.
The novel exposes the harsh judgment of Victorian society, which prioritizes respectability over authenticity. Gossip, legal restrictions, and economic pressures combine to destroy the characters' hopes. Even when they act ethically by their own standards, society brands them as immoral.
Hardy’s critique is both social and philosophical: society, in its current form, is unfit for people who are sensitive, idealistic, or unconventional. Jude and Sue are not punished by divine justice, but by the unforgiving machinery of social convention.
6. Gender and Female Autonomy:
Through Sue Bridehead, Hardy offers a radical examination of female autonomy in a patriarchal society. Sue is intelligent, educated, and critical of traditional gender roles. She resists the roles of submissive wife and passive mother, preferring intellectual companionship and emotional intimacy over sexual or domestic submission.
However, her independence comes at a high cost. Society scorns her for living with Jude unmarried and for defying conventional femininity. When tragedy strikes, she reverts to religious guilt and self-denial, effectively renouncing her autonomy. This regression shows how deeply societal and religious pressures are internalized by women, leading them to suppress their own desires.
Hardy presents Sue’s journey as sympathetic but tragic she is not a triumphant feminist hero, but a victim of her environment. Her fate reflects Hardy’s belief that Victorian society offered no sustainable path for women who challenged its norms.
7. The Illusion of Ideals:
Much of the tragedy in Jude the Obscure arises from the clash between ideals and reality. Jude idealizes Christminster as a center of knowledge and enlightenment, but it is revealed to be an exclusive, uncaring institution. Sue idealizes love as pure and non-physical, but finds herself tormented by her body's and society’s demands.
Hardy uses these characters to explore the destructive power of illusion. Their aspirations to live for truth, love, and intellectual pursuit are crushed by real-world conditions: poverty, classism, legal restrictions, and psychological frailty.
This theme ties into Hardy’s broader critique of romanticism. He shows that dreams, however noble, must contend with the brutal indifference of the world. The novel’s title Jude the Obscure suggests not only his social insignificance but also the vagueness and unattainability of his ideals.
Conclusion:
In Jude the Obscure, Hardy presents a devastating portrait of a society that thwarts individual aspiration and punishes non-conformity. Through his exploration of class, religion, marriage, gender, and social convention, he reveals the deep-rooted injustices of Victorian England. The novel is not simply a personal tragedy it is a systemic one, in which people like Jude and Sue are destroyed not by personal flaws but by a world that denies them the right to live fully and freely.
Hardy’s vision is uncompromising, often bleak, but profoundly insightful. His themes continue to resonate in modern discussions about social inequality, personal freedom, and institutional hypocrisy.
Q |5. Watch these videos and write summary with critical comment:
Here's an answer structured as a "summary with critical comment" is about "Jude the Obscure," using the content from the video previously analyzed.
Summary :
A Deep Dive into Victorian Society," offers an insightful overview of Thomas Hardy's controversial novel. It begins by establishing Hardy's status as a transitional figure between Victorian and Modern literature, noting his initial poetic ambitions and eventual success as a regional novelist focusing on Wessex. It delves into the novel's publication history, detailing its serialization in Harper's New Monthly Magazine from December 1894 to November 1895, before its publication as a complete book in 1895. It highlights the evolution of the novel's title from The Simpletons to Hearts Insurgent, finally settling on Jude the Obscure, and credits Osgood, McIlvaine & Company as the book's publisher.
A significant portion is dedicated to the novel's core themes, emphasizing class, education, religion, and marriage as central to Hardy's narrative. It outlines the novel's six distinct geographical parts (Marygreen, Christminster, Melchester, Shaston, Aldbrickham, and Christminster revisited) and introduces the main characters: Jude Fawley (the orphaned central character aspiring to be a scholar), Sue Bridehead (his cousin, a complex figure challenging societal norms), Arabella Donn (Jude's manipulative first wife), Aunt Drusilla (Jude's guardian), Richard Phillotson (a school teacher), Little Father Time (Jude's melancholic son), Mr. Trouthem (a farmer), Dr. Vilbert (a quack doctor), Mr. Haighridge (a clergyman), Jillengam (a friend of Phillotson), Cartlett (Arabella's second husband), and Tinker Taylor (Jude's old friend).
The post further explores the real-life inspirations behind the novel, connecting the tragic deaths of Horace Moule (1873) and Tryphena Sparks (1890) to the novel's pessimistic undertones. It also touches upon the public outcry against the novel, citing Bishop Walsham How's burning of a copy due to its controversial themes, particularly those related to marriage and sexual relationships, which ultimately led Hardy to cease writing novels. The piece concludes by underscoring the novel's enduring critical commentary on societal constraints and the tragic consequences faced by individuals who dare to defy them.
Critical Comment :
The video is purely informational, delivered in a straightforward, lecture-style format with a static shot of the speaker and a whiteboard. While this approach is effective for presenting facts for an exam, its lack of visual engagement or dynamic delivery might make it difficult for some viewers to maintain attention. It serves its purpose as a reference tool but doesn't offer a deeper, more analytical look into the novel's themes.
Reference:
1. Barad, Dilip. “Jude the Obscure.” Jude the Obscure, 1 Jan. 1970, blog.dilipbarad.com/2021/01/jude-obscure.html?m=1. Accessed 22 Sept. 2025.
2. English Kingdom. “PGT/ UGC- Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy: Shivam Dubey at English Kingdom, Katra Alld (9369542072).” YouTube, 5 Mar. 2018, www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Sjip53uUM0. Accessed 22 Sept. 2025.
3. Barad , Dilip. “MA Sem 1 | Jude | Structure .” YouTube, DoE-MKBU, 31 Jan. 2021, youtu.be/2a3yU97uXEQ?si=VQ-1AWlfOyXFnXkr. Accessed 22 Sept. 2025.
4. Barad , Dilip. “MA Sem 1 | Jude | Symbolic Indictment of Christianity - Article .” YouTube, DoE-MKBU, 31 Jan. 2021, youtu.be/GgWQiqAuIpk?si=WfJw-1r7VDrJ9eOL. Accessed 22 Sept. 2025.
5. Barad , Dilip. “MA Sem 1 | Jude | Bildungsroman - Article .” YouTube, DoE-MKBU, 31 Jan. 2021, youtu.be/HPguYqDXZuo?si=giZ3FNIY-j7SM7tg. Accessed 22 Sept. 2025.
6. Barad , Dilip. “MA Sem 1 | Themes | Jude the Obscure .” YouTube, DoE-MKBU, 29 Jan. 2021, youtu.be/Qx45A-tz_5M?si=0f7NwvDippqItNxc. Accessed 22 Sept. 2025.


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