In existographies, D.H. Lawrence (1885-1930) (CR:4) was an English novelist, poet, playwright, essayist, literary critic, painter, and philosopher, noted for []
Overview
The works Lawrence, according to Bruce Clarke, is said to use thermodynamics logic in an allegorical sense to discuss sexual energy. [1]
In 2007, English German-cultures scholar Carl Krockel, in his PhD dissertation “D.H. Lawrence and Germany: the Politics of Influence” turned book, summarized the Goethe-Eliot connection. [2]
Quotes | By
The following are quotes by Lawrence:
“The essential American soul is hard, isolate, stoic, and a killer. It has never yet melted.”
— D.H. Lawrence (c.1910), Publication; opening quote in film Hostiles (2018)
References
1. Clarke, Bruce. (1998). “A Different Sun: The Allegory of Thermodynamics in D. H. Lawrence”, in Myth and Making of Modernity (pgs. 81-98, esp. pg. 97), edited by Michael Bell and Peter Poellner. Rodopi.
2. Krockel, Carl. (2007). D.H. Lawrence and Germany: the Politics of Influence (pgs. 21-22). Rodopi.
External links
● D.H. Lawrence – Wikipedia.