D. H. Lawrence made the final break through the mask of Victorian prudery to gain a full conception of man and his role in the universe. His principal emphasis is on the restoration of man's conception of himself as animal, an animal capable of conceptualizing, but essentially animal all the same. In attempting to restore man to the mindless state of irrational animism, Lawrence did away with the conventional idea of man as the perfection of God's created universe. Lawrence did not conceive of man as being controller of the natural universe; he thought of man as being, like Mellors in Lady Chatterly's Lover, a warden who lives within natural order. He attacks vain intellectual sophistry of the scientific, industrial society and finds man t...
The psychodynamic model is founded on the ideas of Sigmund Freud. Freud’s writings have a greater in...
“In the contemporary literary scenario, D.H. Lawrence has a very important position as a writer of t...
This study examines Lawrence's views of nature and their relations to perspectives drawn from Orient...
D.H. Lawrence's interest in male relationships, and its manifestation throughout his work in the the...
The growth of an individual into mature selfhood is the primary basis of the Lawrentian relationship...
The final aim of every living thing, creature, or being is the full achievement of itself. Criticism...
Lawrence's work has almost invevitably been read as an aesthetic production whereby one must eventua...
World War I and the expatriate status it conferred upon D. H. Lawrence coalesced to produce a mythop...
From the early novels onwards, Lawrence\u2019s work displays a close attention for the body, which i...
D. H. Lawrence left one of the most diverse collections of literary works ever contributed to the li...
Darwin’s theories helped both to destroy D. H. Lawrence’s early Christianity, and to shape the latte...
While literary critics have tended to focus on episodes of alleged masculinism or homoeroticism in D...
D.H. Lawrence spent his life reflecting upon the individual’s place in a society ruled by the intell...
Using Romanticism as a basis for study, this dissertation examines the uses of nature in the major n...
The thesis explores the various aspects of the love death theme in the parent-child, man-man, and m...
The psychodynamic model is founded on the ideas of Sigmund Freud. Freud’s writings have a greater in...
“In the contemporary literary scenario, D.H. Lawrence has a very important position as a writer of t...
This study examines Lawrence's views of nature and their relations to perspectives drawn from Orient...
D.H. Lawrence's interest in male relationships, and its manifestation throughout his work in the the...
The growth of an individual into mature selfhood is the primary basis of the Lawrentian relationship...
The final aim of every living thing, creature, or being is the full achievement of itself. Criticism...
Lawrence's work has almost invevitably been read as an aesthetic production whereby one must eventua...
World War I and the expatriate status it conferred upon D. H. Lawrence coalesced to produce a mythop...
From the early novels onwards, Lawrence\u2019s work displays a close attention for the body, which i...
D. H. Lawrence left one of the most diverse collections of literary works ever contributed to the li...
Darwin’s theories helped both to destroy D. H. Lawrence’s early Christianity, and to shape the latte...
While literary critics have tended to focus on episodes of alleged masculinism or homoeroticism in D...
D.H. Lawrence spent his life reflecting upon the individual’s place in a society ruled by the intell...
Using Romanticism as a basis for study, this dissertation examines the uses of nature in the major n...
The thesis explores the various aspects of the love death theme in the parent-child, man-man, and m...
The psychodynamic model is founded on the ideas of Sigmund Freud. Freud’s writings have a greater in...
“In the contemporary literary scenario, D.H. Lawrence has a very important position as a writer of t...
This study examines Lawrence's views of nature and their relations to perspectives drawn from Orient...