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D.H. Lawrence and Ambivalence in the Age of Modernity

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D.H. Lawrence and Ambivalence in the Age of Modernity Synopsis

D. H. Lawrence is renowned for his scathing criticism of the ruling class, industrialisation of the country and wartime patriotism. However, his texts bear the imprint of contemporary dominant ideologies and discourses of the period. Comparing Lawrence's texts to various major and minor contemporary novels, journal articles, political pamphlets and history books, this book aims to demonstrate that Lawrence's texts are ambivalent: his texts harbour the dynamism of conflicting power struggles between the subversive and the reactionary. For example, in some apparently apolitical texts such as The White Peacock and Movements in European History, reactionary ideologies and wartime propaganda are embedded. Some texts like Lady Chatterley's Lover are intended to be a radical critique of the period wherein it was composed, but they also bear discernible traces of the contemporary frame of reference that they intend to subvert. Focusing on Lawrence's stories and novels set in the mining countryside and the works composed under the impact of the First World War, this book establishes that Lawrence's texts in fact consist of multiple layers that are often in conflict with each other, serving as a testimony to the age of modernity.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781032675664
Publication date:
Author: Gaku Iwai
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 218 pages
Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature
Genres: Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Literary theory