D. H. Lawrence

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D. H. Lawrence An intense life 1885-1930

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D. H. Lawrence. An intense life 1885-1930. The young Lawrence. David Herbert Lawrence was born in 1885 in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire. He was the fourth of five children of a miner and an educated mother. Education. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of D. H. Lawrence

Page 1: D. H. Lawrence

D. H. Lawrence

An intense life1885-1930

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The young LawrenceDavid Herbert Lawrence was born in 1885 in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire.He was the fourth of five children of a miner and an educated mother.

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EducationEducated in local schools and then attended Nottingham University College where he trained as a teacher.Taught school in Croydon from 1908.His first novel, The White Peacock, was published in 1911,shortly after th death of his mother to whom he’d been very close.

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Other worksMore novels soon followed

The Trespasser 1912The Rainbow 1920The Lost Girl 1920The Boy in the Bush 1922The Captain’s Doll 1923The Virgin and the Gypsy 1930

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PoemsMostly imagistic and in free verse about the

individual inner nature of plants and animals.“Fish”“Snake”“Mountain Lion”“Bavarian Gentians”Look! We Have Come Through (1917)

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Short Stories“The Prussian Officer”“The Woman Who Rode Away”“The Fox”“The Rocking-Horse Winner”“The Man Who Loved Islands”“The Odour of Chrysanthemums”

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Major NovelsWomen in LoveSons and LoversLady Chatterley’s LoverKangarooThe Plumed Serpent

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Criticism and EssaysTopics included

Travel writingAmerican literaturePsychoanalysisThe UnconsciousHistory and democracy

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Personal LifeIn 1912 Lawrence met and ran off with Frieda von Richthofen Weekley, the German wife of a Nottingham professor. Frieda had three children, yet left them and her husband to “elope” with Lawrence.

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A passionate relationshipThe Lawrences returned to England in 1914They traveled with a very literary “set” including Huxley, Katherine Mansfield and her husband, and the Bloomsbury folks

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StrugglesAnti-German feeling during the warCensorshipIll health—tuberculosisThe search for a “right place”Travel included Sicily, Sri Lanka, Australia, New Mexico and Mexico, New Zealand, Tahiti,Italy,Australia, and France

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An Artists’ Colony in Taos

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Themes and PhilosophyDeeply interested in Freudian and Jungian psychology, Lawrence is also influenced by primitive religions and nature mysticism.Sex and sexual freedom as the cure for what ails modern civilization.Nietzschean idea of the superman and rebellion.

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Critical opinions of LawrenceTends to go in and out of fashionEnjoys a great revival in the 1960s and 1970sIs hard to categorize because of the volume and varietyVaries in quality with stories most highly praisedSuffers criticism from didactic slant

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Last yearsBecomes an almost guru to a group of women who call him “Lorenzo” and vie for his attentionTuberculosis worsens, sending he and Frieda in search of easier climatesDies in Vence in the South of France in 1930 at age 44.

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Lawrence’s Legacy “A marvellous writer. He forged his own language.”' Claire Tomalin, `Lawrence urged men and women to live, to honour the quick of themselves, to glory in the exhilarating terror of this brief life.' Frederic Raphael, Sunday Times

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Frieda, on her husband“What he had seen and felt and known he gave in his writing to his fellow men, the splendour of living, the hope of more and more life … a heroic and immeasureable gift.”