NIETZSCHE, HELEN CORKE, and D. H. LAWRENCE
Tags: LAWRENCE, D. H. (David Herbert), 1885-1930; NIETZSCHE, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844-1900; AUTHORS, English
Related Articles
- Death of a Porcupine: D. H. Lawrence and his Successors. Fordham, John // Literature & History;Spring2000, Vol. 9 Issue 1, p56
Indicates that there is a divergent relation between D.H. Lawrence and his successors and this has implications for how Lawrence is read. Olive Moore's essay 'Death of a Porcupine'; Comparison of Lawrence to a porcupine; Implication that Lawrence was a somewhat prickly subject; Post-mortem...
- Nietzsche contra Lawrence: How to be True to the Earth. Garrard, Greg // Colloquy: Text Theory Critique;Nov2006, Issue 12, p9
The article compares the concept of gay science introduced by authors Friedrich Nietzsche and D. H. Lawrence. They rejected the Christian denigration of nature. In the book "The Gay Science/Die Frohliche Wissenschaft," Nietzsche proposes a programme of de-deification of nature together with a...
- CHAPTER ONE: Introduction: Lawrence At "The Bloody Crossroads". Scherr, Barry J. // D.H. Lawrence Today: Literature, Culture, Politics;2004, p1
The chapter explores the left wing academia's discrimination against English author D. H. Lawrence. With the indubitable triumph of left-wing politics over literature at the academy in the 1990s Lawrence's reputation appears to be in permanent eclipse. With excellence being replaced by diversity...
- CHAPTER TWO: Lawrence's Quarrel with the Jews. Scherr, Barry J. // D.H. Lawrence Today: Literature, Culture, Politics;2004, p97
The chapter analyzes the views of English writer D. H. Lawrence towards the Jews, as reflected in his works. Far from being anti-Semitic, Lawrence actually conceived the Jewish people to be the heroes of the supreme Lawrentian religious mystery. This Lawrentian affinity with the Jews is given...
- CHAPTER THREE: "A Matter of Life and Death". Scherr, Barry J. // D.H. Lawrence Today: Literature, Culture, Politics;2004, p171
The chapter analyzes the views of English writer D. H. Lawrence on homosexuality as reflected in his works. Lawrence's attitude towards homosexuality was part and parcel of his attitude towards his own originality and uniqueness. In a world where homosexuality was predominant among the elite,...
- CHAPTER FOUR: Sex, Selfhood, Literature and Politics. Scherr, Barry J. // D.H. Lawrence Today: Literature, Culture, Politics;2004, p319
The chapter analyzes the criticisms made by left-wing literary-cultural critic Jonathan Dollimore against English writer D. H. Lawrence. In his first dissertation, Radical Tragedy, Dollimore attacks Lawrence as having a dislike of democratic humanitarian philosophy. Dollimore goes on to deplore...
- D.H. Lawrence. // Academy of American Poets -- Biographies of American Poets;2006, p294
A biography of David Herbert Lawrence, an English poet, novelist, short-story writer, and essayist, is presented. He was born in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, England, in 1885. Though better known as a novelist, Lawrence's first-published works were poems, and his poetry have influenced writers on...
- THE LATER LAWRENCE. Schorer, Mark // New Republic;4/7/53, Vol. 126 Issue 14, p17
Reviews the book "The Later D.H. Lawrence," by William York Tindall.
- D.H. Lawrence Aliprandini, Michael // D.H. Lawrence (9781429806459);2006, p1
This article chronicles the early life of English author D.H. Lawrence, whose novels, short stories, poems, criticism, and travelogues attacked the prevailing Victorian morality and dehumanization of the industrial era. David Herbert Lawrence was born in 1885, in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire. His...


