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Literature Criticism
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedD.H. Lawrence's The Daughter-in-Law, Mint Theater, City Center, New York City (Feb. 8--March 20, 2022) When I saw the production of D. H. Lawrence The Daughter-in-Law at the Mint Theater in New York City in 2003, I...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedBy the end of the First World War, the state and status of the country house were equivocal, at best. Richard A. Kaye puts the point strongly: "The country refuge that had served as a living, undestroyed symbol of a...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedLawrence's Works (Cambridge University Press Editions) A 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...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedLawrence's later critical writings are notably concerned with art's potential to evoke a direct relation to the nonhuman world, and thus themselves deserve close attention in the growing debate on the ecological...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe aim of this essay is to discuss D.H. Lawrence's Women in Love, (1920) in a European Modemist context, touching on the early twentieth century European avant-garde, including Post-Impressionism, Expressionism,...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedEarl Ingersoll died suddenly at the age of 83 on December 9, 2021. Earl graduated from the University of Rochester (BA), Syracuse University (MA), and the University of Wisconsin (Ph.D.) He had a long, very successful...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-Reviewed"Of their sweet deaths are sweetest odors made" --William Shakespeare, Sonnet 54 Despite a keen interest in psychoanalysis, there is no evidence that D.H. Lawrence read Sigmund Freud (FU xxviii). In fact, despite...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedLove is infected by disease throughout Women in Love (1920). But for Rupert Birkin, the disease of love is also a potentially gratifying "disease" that he "do[esn't] want to be cured of' (LI 129). In the novel, metaphors...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn 1962 the literary scholar George Ford (1914-1994), then a professor of English at the University of Rochester, was at the University of Texas at Austin researching what would become his study of Lawrence, Double...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedFrom the standpoint of Lawrence studies, What Was Literary Impressionism? (2018) is something of a red herring. Represented exclusively by the early "Odour of Chrysanthemums," D. H. Lawrence figures here but briefly, and...
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From:D.H. Lawrence Review (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-Reviewed"Rereading Women in Love after so many years, I discover it to be strangely distant from what I had recalled," the late literary critic Harold Bloom observed in one of his last published works, the 2020 The Bright Book...