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Selected Critical Writings

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ISBN-10: 0192823647

ISBN-13: 9780192823649

Edition: 1998

Authors: D. H. Lawrence, Michael Herbert

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'A critic must be able to feel the impact of a work of art in all its complexity and force. To do so, he must be a man of force and complexity himself...' 'A critic must be emotionally alive in every fibre, intellectually capable and skilful in essential logic, and then morally very honest.' These comments by D. H. Lawrence are as close a description as any of himself as a critic. They come from his essay on fellow novelist John Galsworthy, and there are many other pieces on novels and novelists in this selection. But Lawrence's range of genres extends to poetry and plays and paintings, and his critical writing encompasses an enormous variety of subjects, from Aeschylus and the Apocalypse…    
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Book details

Copyright year: 1998
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 416
Size: 5.08" wide x 7.72" long x 0.71" tall
Weight: 0.572
Language: English

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…    

Selected Critical Writings
Oxford World's Classics
Introduction
Note on the Texts
Select Bibliography
A Chronology of D. H. Lawrence
Selected Critical Writings
Thomas Mann
From Study of Thomas Hardy
Poetry of the Present
Whitman
The Spirit of Place
Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Novels
Herman Melville's Typee and Omoo
Herman Melville's Moby Dick
The Future of the Novel
Review of a Second Contemporary Verse Anthology
The Proper Study
Review of the Book of Revelation
Climbing Down Pisgah
Art and Morality
Morality and the Novel
The Novel
Him with His Tail in His Mouth
Review of Hadrian the Seventh by Baron Corvo
Why the Novel Matters
John Galsworthy
Introduction to Mastro-Don Gesualdo
Chaos in Poetry
Review of the Station: Athos, Treasures and Men by Robert Byron; England and the Octopus by Clough Williams-Ellis; Comfortless Memory by Maurice Baring; Ashenden by W. Somerset Maugham
Introduction to These Paintings
Introduction to Pansies
Making Pictures
Pornography and Obscenity
Introduction to the Dragon of the Apocalypse
Explanatory Notes
Index