Women in Love

Couverture
Collector's Library, 2005 - 662 pages
In Women in Love (1920), Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen, who first appeared in Lawrence's earlier novel, The Rainbow, take centre stage as Lawrence explores their growth and development in their relationships with two powerful men, Rupert Birkin and his friend Gerald Crich. A novel of regeneration and dark, destructive human passion, the book reflects the impact on Lawrence of World War I in the potential both for annihilation and salvation of the self. Quintessentially modernist, the novel is one of Lawrence's most extraordinary, innovative and unsettling works. Lawrence actually completed this tale in 1916, the year after the The Rainbow fiasco - in which copies were ordered by a magistrate to be destroyed under the Obscene Publications Act. As for Women in Love, almost every publisher in London refused the manuscripts. Methuen (publisher of The Rainbow) cancelled their contract with Lawrence after reading it, and Duckworth also refused to accept the novel for publication. Publication had to wait for almost five years, and then it was privately printed in New York.

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Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

Sisters
9
Shortlands
30
Classroom
46
Diver
60
In the Train
69
Creme de Menthe
81
Fetish
101
Breadalby
108
Rabbit
315
Moony
329
Gladiatorial
359
Threshold
373
Woman to Woman
393
Excurse
407
Death and Love
434
Marriage or Not
474

Coaldust
146
Sketchbook
158
An Island
163
Carpeting
177
Mino
191
Waterparty
206
Sunday Evening
255
Man to Man
266
The Industrial Magnate
282
A Chair
479
Flitting
493
Gudrun in the Pompadour
514
Continental
522
Snowed Up
596
Exeunt
643
Afterword
653
Bibliography
662
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (2005)

D(avid) H(erbert) Lawrence was born on September 11, 1885. His father was a coal miner and Lawrence grew up in a mining town in England. He always hated the mines, however, and frequently used them in his writing to represent both darkness and industrialism, which he despised because he felt it was scarring the English countryside. Lawrence attended high school and college in Nottingham and, after graduation, became a school teacher in Croyden in 1908. Although his first two novels had been unsuccessful, he turned to writing full time when a serious illness forced him to stop teaching. Lawrence spent much of his adult life abroad in Europe, particularly Italy, where he wrote some of his most significant and most controversial novels, including Sons and Lovers and Lady Chatterly's Lover. Lawrence and his wife, Frieda, who had left her first husband and her children to live with him, spent several years touring Europe and also lived in New Mexico for a time. Lawrence had been a frail child, and he suffered much of his life from tuberculosis. Eventually, he retired to a sanitorium in Nice, France. He died in France in 1930, at age 44. In his relatively short life, he produced more than 50 volumes of short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel journals, and letters, in addition to the novels for which he is best known.

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