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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTwo very different and accomplished contemporary writers, separated by a generation and nationality, one alive, the other deceased, have had their recent say on D. H. Lawrence. In an interview in the Paris Review in...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAlthough he is little read nowadays, Michael Arlen (1895-1956) was a literary shooting star among the "smart set" of the 1920s. The self-styled chronicler of Mayfair society, he became an international celebrity after...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedFrom the earliest to the latest of his philosophising Lawrence pictures human consciousness, the psyche, as dynamically polarised, physiological, fundamentally bodily-rooted. (1) Though he changes his terms over the...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedOn Saturday, May 1, 1915, The Egoist published D. H. Lawrence's war poem "Eloi, Eloi Lama Sabachthani." Fed up with the conflict and struggling to stay emotionally detached from Europe's communal suffering, Lawrence...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn 1947 The Viking Press published The Portable D. H. Lawrence, edited by Diana Trilling, who supplied a mostly admiring introduction to the volume. Trilling wrote that "Even while he lived, Lawrence met great popular...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedA Apocalypse and the Writings on Revelation AR Aaron's Rod BB The Boy in the Bush EME England, My England and Other Stories EC The Escaped Cock (The Man Who Died) in VG Fox The Fox, The Captain's Doll, The...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAlthough D. H. Lawrence is arguably the modernist writer with the greatest influence on the critical reception of American writing in the twentieth-century, his Studies in Classic American Literature (1923) being a...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWhen in 1960 the American poet Sylvia Plath signed the contract with the publisher William Heinemann for her first book of poetry, The Colossus and Other Poems (the only collection of her poems published during her...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn Hard Times (1854), Charles Dickens memorably described Gradgrind's school as "a grim mechanical substitute for ... tender young imaginations" (2). The depiction of formal education as a process of industrialising,...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn "Introduction to These Paintings" (LEA 185-217), Lawrence clears the ground for reception of his own paintings with a critique ranging over Western art. The present essay begins with the geological and geographical...