Creativity and the Religious Impulse in the Works of D. H. Lawrence
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Köp båda 2 för 1576 kr?Demonstrating prodigious knowledge not only of Lawrence's works, but also of those of his critics and of various relevant theoreticians, Poplawski does not claim to be either comprehensive or original. Rather, he wishes to explore, for the first time in depth, a commonly acknowledged major theme in Lawrence-creativity, arguing that it is "a central structuring principle of his aesthetic, ethical, and metaphysical thought." Throughout, Poplawski focuses on ideas, using various Lawrence works to illustrate them. After examining the history of various meanings of creativity (Chapter 1) and relating them to Lawrence's notions the "creative unconscious" (Chapter 2), he provides an overview of the novels, pointing to limitations in the first three novels, arguing that in The Rainbow and Women in Love Lawrence provides the greatest scope and detail in his treatment of creativity, and asserting that the remaining novels focus much more narrowly on individual aspects of it. Most of the remaining chapters examine this position. First, however, Poplawski demonstrates the inseparability of Lawrence's concept of creativity and his religious views, and in a later chapter he explores, in some depth, numerous contradictions in Lawrence's thinking. This is a valubale study-knowledgeable. thoughtful, licid and balanced. Advanced undergraduate; graduate; faculty.?-Choice ?While most people would argue that creativity is a good thing and that 'creativity in literature' is a topic germane to a discussion of Lawrence's work, there have been few attempts to examine precisely what is meant by these terms. Paul Poplawski's well-structured and copiously annotated study fills the gap, and in it he has signally achieved his aim of both 'clarifying and problematising' what is meant by 'creativity.'?-Journal of the D.H. Lawrence Society "While most people would argue that creativity is a good thing and that 'creativity in literature' is a topic germane to a discussion of Lawrence's work, there have been few attempts to examine precisely what is meant by these terms. Paul Poplawski's well-structured and copiously annotated study fills the gap, and in it he has signally achieved his aim of both 'clarifying and problematising' what is meant by 'creativity.'"-Journal of the D.H. Lawrence Society "Demonstrating prodigious knowledge not only of Lawrence's works, but also of those of his critics and of various relevant theoreticians, Poplawski does not claim to be either comprehensive or original. Rather, he wishes to explore, for the first time in depth, a commonly acknowledged major theme in Lawrence-creativity, arguing that it is "a central structuring principle of his aesthetic, ethical, and metaphysical thought." Throughout, Poplawski focuses on ideas, using various Lawrence works to illustrate them. After examining the history of various meanings of creativity (Chapter 1) and relating them to Lawrence's notions the "creative unconscious" (Chapter 2), he provides an overview of the novels, pointing to limitations in the first three novels, arguing that in The Rainbow and Women in Love Lawrence provides the greatest scope and detail in his treatment of creativity, and asserting that the remaining novels focus much more narrowly on individual aspects of it. Most of the remaining chapters examine this position. First, however, Poplawski demonstrates the inseparability of Lawrence's concept of creativity and his religious views, and in a later chapter he explores, in some depth, numerous contradictions in Lawrence's thinking. This is a valubale study-knowledgeable. thoughtful, licid and balanced. Advanced undergraduate; graduate; faculty."-Choice
PAUL POPLAWSKI is Director of Studies at Vaughan College, University of Leicester. He has taught widely in 19th and 20th century literature and specializes in D. H. Lawrence, Modernism, and Jane Austen. He recently published a revised 3rd edition of Warren Robets' A Bibliography of D. H. Lawrence (2001). He is also the author of D. H. Lawrence: A Reference Companion (Greenwood, 1996), and A Jane Austen Encyclopedia (Greenwood, 1998), and editor of Writing the Body in D. H. Lawrence (Greenwood, 2001).
Preface Introduction The Concept of Creativity: A Preliminary View The Creative Unconscious: Self, Society and Freedom The Art of Creativity Creative Evolution: The Early Formation of Lawrence's Religious Thought Nature, Art and Belief in the Early Novels The Metaphysics of Creativity and The Rainbow The Rainbow II: Rhythms of the Unknown God Lawrence Against Himself: Elitism and the Mystification of Sex Consolidation: 1915-1930 Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index