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Modernity and the politics of place-experience in D.H. Lawrence's novels with parallel readings of Arnold Bennett, Giovanni Verga, Patrick White and Gregario Lopez y FuentesPark, Yeo Sun January 2012 (has links)
D.H. Lawrence's literary imagination is inherently linked to diverse places and his writings are responses to the spirit of places where he travelled and lived. In opposition to the universalising spirit of modernity based on space, Lawrence turns towards a concrete and place-based consciousness and brings a new dimension of thought to the critical category of modem criticism: place. The thesis argues that Lawrence locates the question of place as the central problem of modernity predominated by space, and develops a place-based imagination in his oeuvre as a measure against the all-destroying dominance of space. In Lawrence's works, a 'place-consciousness' informed by place-specificity is, in return, to be projected on to space manifested in the domain of capital and modernity. In this regard, Lawrence is in accord witb the Anglo-Arnerican cultural geographers of the last few decades who have been trying to bring about a transformation of the pervasive space-experience of modernity. However, the way Lawrence's works relate to the dyad of space and place is different from tbat of cultural geograpbers. In their efforts to re-structure and re-evaluate the relationship between space and place, geographers tend to tumble into a snare oftheir own making: space-place binaries. The thesis argues that Lawrence, in contrast, persists with regard the fundamental primacy of place. The thesis parallels multiple dimensions of place expounded by Edward Casey in his philosophical topoanalysis based on phenomenology with Lawrence's literary topoanalysis as rendered in his novels relating to different places: England, Italy, Australia and Mexico. Lawrence's writings are in turn compared to topoanalyses by writers native to the places in which he travels and resides to produce his regional writings. These authors are Arnold Bennett, Giovanni Yerga, Patrick White and Gregorio Lopez y Fuentes.
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Baggy monsters in iron cages : The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists' and the literary realismSmith-Rawnsley, John Michael January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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The destruction of the artist as a young girl : a case study of the life and work of Antonia WhiteJeffery, Sandra Ann January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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'In her nature or in her sex' : Virginia Woolf and the politics of differenceShahriari, Lisa January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Musical forms and aesthetics in the works of Virginia WoolfCrapoulet, Emilie January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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The dark Chinoiserie of Thomas Burke and the perversity of LimehouseWitchard, Anne Veronica January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Nomadic subjects : the writing of Virginia WoolfPotts, Gina Marie Vitello January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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The cockney at home : class, culture and the city in the works of Edwin Pugh (1874-1930)Baggott, Sally-Ann January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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D.H. Lawrence and French feminismTorbey, Nahla January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Caught in the narrative act : journalists and journalism in Graham Greene's fiction : case studies of The Name of Action, Stamboul Train, It's a Battlefield, England Made Me and The Quiet AmericanChakrabarti, Debanjan January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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