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Literature Criticism
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From:Papers on Language & Literature (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewed"To achieve his own soul's wholeness and integrity is the life-work of every man." D. H. Lawrence, Fantasia of the Unconscious "Things might not be immediately discernible in what a man writes and in this...
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From:The Mailer Review (Vol. 10, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedI Since its posthumous publication in 1930, it remains the long-established and oddly qualified opinion that The Virgin and the Gipsy is one of Lawrence's most successful albeit minor works of fiction. Admiration for...
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From:Journal of Modern Literature (Vol. 43, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe development of D.H. Lawrence's "The Man Who Loved Islands" through Cathcart's consecutive ownership of three islands engages the consequences of Cathcart's intense isolation from humanity. In the process of charting...
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From:The Mailer Review (Vol. 13, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTHE TALENTED WRITER, GEOFF DYER, has edited and introduced a well-designed anthology of selected essays by D.H. Lawrence. He remains an excellent choice to assemble the volume, for among his previous books is Out of...
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From:Papers on Language & Literature (Vol. 29, Issue 4) Peer-Reviewed'The Virgin and the Gipsy' by D.H. Lawrence has been consistently dismissed because it is too short to develop any of Lawrence's themes in depth. However, this novella reveals the same themes as later demonstrated in...
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From:The Mailer Review (Vol. 14, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed"Sun" is regarded as one of D.H. Lawrence's finest short stories, although critics have not sufficiently focused on its integrated structure, patterned repetition, and visionary implications. There is inadequate...
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From:Studies in the Humanities (Vol. 36, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed"I do not know which to prefer, the beauty of inflections or the beauty of innuendoes, the blackbird whistling or just after." Wallace Stevens, "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird" "I know I am particularly...
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From:The Mailer Review (Vol. 11, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedCompensatory Reversal and the Voluptuous Suffocation: Nightmare and Sexual Revenge in "The Border-Line" The notorious imbroglio in London at the Cafe Royal in late December, 1923 involving D.H. Lawrence, J. Middleton...
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From: D. H. Lawrence Review[(essay date Summer 1998) In the following essay, Balbert argues against Trilling's interpretation of D. H. Lawrence's Mr Noon.] "Is not the marriage bed a fiery battlefield as well as a perfect communion, both...
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From: The Hemingway Review[(essay date 1983) In the following essay, Balbert contends that “a neglected crux of A Farewell to Arms is its ability to demonstrate, in a persuasive and moving fashion, how Frederic Henry’s practical, soldierly, but...
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From: Studies in the Novel[(essay date fall 2002) In the following essay, Balbert maintains that "The Princess" is an impressive achievement "for the seamless way that it connects Lawrence's developing stylistic notions on writing and painting...
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From: Caverns of Night: Coal Mines in Art, Literature, and Film[(essay date 2000) In the following essay, Balbert argues that critics of Lawrence’s 1911 story “Odour of Chrysanthemums” “have failed to note the provocative interconnections among the impinging themes of family life,...
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From: D. H. Lawrence Review[(essay date 86) In the following essay, originally presented at a conference in 1985, Balbert comments on the “preponderance of negative response” toward Lawrence’s “putative treatment of the Woman” in “The Woman Who...