D. H. Lawrence

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Standard Name: Lawrence, D. H.
Used Form: David Herbert Lawrence
DHL published prolifically between 1909 and his death in 1930: poetry, novels, short stories, travel literature, and social comment. He was always a controversialist, fighting against the machanizing, dehumanizing, desexualizing tendencies of modern life, and was also a playwright and a painter.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Dorothy Brett
DB , having refused to participate in a festival marking forty years since the death of D. H. Lawrence, drafted the one of several supplements to her account in Lawrence and Brett of her time...
Textual Production Catherine Carswell
CC published in the Glasgow Herald a favourable review of D. H. Lawrence 's The Rainbow. Though its praise was less unqualified than that she had given The White Peacock in 1911, it got...
Textual Production Dorothy Richardson
In her correspondence Richardson addresses a great range of topics, including her own varied reading. She comments on women writers from Julian of Norwich through Jane Austen , Emily and Charlotte Brontë , George Eliot
Textual Production Julia Frankau
JF loved to read the current books but had no interest in the lives of the authors. Among literature of the past she much admired that of the eighteenth century, and particularly Richardson 's Clarissa...
Textual Production Sir James George Frazer
The Golden Bough, a comparative study of human beliefs from the earliest times, had a major influence on modernist writings. SJGF 's text outlines an evolving belief system, which moves from magic, to religion...
Textual Production Lady Cynthia Asquith
For this volume D. H. Lawrence wrote his well-known The Rocking-Horse Winner (after LCA had turned down his Glad Ghosts because of its portrait of herself), about a child whose toy steed gives him the...
Textual Production Catherine Carswell
CC published a second biography, The Savage Pilgrimage: A Narrative of D. H. Lawrence. After brisk early sales, charges that it was libellous caused her publisher, Chatto and Windus , to remove it from the market.
Pilditch, Jan. Catherine Carswell. A Biography. John Donald, 2007.
142
Carswell, John, and Catherine Carswell. “Introduction”. The Savage Pilgrimage: A Narrative of D. H. Lawrence, Cambridge University Press, 1981, p. v - xxxv.
xxv
Carswell, Catherine. Lying Awake: An Unfinished Autobiography and Other Posthumous Papers. Editor Carswell, John, 1st ed., Secker and Warburg, 1950.
204-6
Textual Production Frances Horovitz
Greg Gatanby included FH 's poem Invocation in his Whales: A Celebration, 1983. This anthology comprises excerpts from literature, legends, myths, religions, and poetry from around the world. Among others included are Jonathan Swift
Textual Production Doris Lessing
DL also wrote such brief works of literary comment as a foreword for The Fox by D. H. Lawrence , published by Hesperus in 2002, and an article for the Guardian in June 2003 on...
Textual Production Helen Dunmore
HD 's many other writings include reviews (of both poetry and fiction), introductions (to the poems of Emily Brontë , the stories of D. H. Lawrence and F. Scott Fitzgerald , and a study of...
Textual Production Lady Cynthia Asquith
Her letters to D. H. Lawrence are in the Harry Ransom Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin and her letters to Walter de la Mare in the Bodleian Library . Most of...
Textual Production Dorothy Brett
Like most of her circle DB was an energetic letter-writer. In 1931 she made a will leaving all of her papers and Lawrence 's in her possession to Alfred Stieglitz and Georgia O'Keeffe , but...
Textual Production Catherine Carswell
She continued reviewing after the Great War. She struck an enduring relationship with the Manchester Guardian (though she often had to write for its Women's Corner on topics like cosmetics). She reviewed Lawrence 's play...
Textual Production Marie Belloc Lowndes
MBL 's Love is a Flame appeared as one of the first of the paperbound, novella-length Ninepenny Novels series. The Times Literary Supplement comments on the series shared a page with a review of Lawrence
Textual Production Dorothy Brett
On 2 March 1930, when Lawrence died in France, Brett was in New York City mourning her father's death little more than a month earlier and hoping to receive more positive news of Lawrence's condition...

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Texts

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