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D. H. Lawrence and 'Difference'
0 - Default Title
Description
The starting-point of this enquiry into Lawrentian 'difference' is, for the purposes of this study, the poetry, its stylistic features, the ways in which it has been read, and, importantly, involves a search for a critical language by which it, and its 'difference', might be addressed. In doing so, it takes recourse to Jacques Derrida's notions of 'grammatalogy' and 'ecriture', and Michel Foucault's notion of 'discourse'. Referring to Lawrence's travel writings about Mexico and Italy, his essays on European and Etruscan art, on Mexican marketplaces and rituals, and American literature, and especially to his poetic manifesto, 'The Poetry of the Present,' this book shows how Lawrence was working towards both a theory and a practice that critique the post-Enlightenment unitary European self.
Chaudhuri also, radically, allows his own post-colonial identity to inform his reading of the poetry, and to let the poems enter into a conversation with that identity. This is the first time that Lawrence's poetry has been discussed in this way, in the light of post-colonial and post-structuralist theory; it is also the first time a leading post-colonial writer of his generation has taken as his subject a major canonical English writer, and, through him, remapped the English canon as a site of 'difference.'
Product details
Edition:
1
Number of Pages:
240
Release Date:
2003-07-24
Publication Date:
2003-06-12
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
0199260524
ISBN13:
9780199260522
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
475 g
Height:
145 cm
Width:
222 cm
Thickness:
18 cm
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