Book contents
- The Novel and the Problem of New Life
- The Novel and the Problem of New Life
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1 Order and Origin
- Chapter 2 Revenge of the Unborn
- Chapter 3 Hardy and the Vanity of Procreation
- Chapter 4 Lawrence’s Storm of Fecundity
- Chapter 5 The Children of Others in Woolf
- Chapter 6 Reproduction and Dystopia
- Chapter 7 Lessing on Generations and Freedom
- Chapter 8 Procreating on Patmos
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Chapter 4 - Lawrence’s Storm of Fecundity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 June 2021
- The Novel and the Problem of New Life
- The Novel and the Problem of New Life
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1 Order and Origin
- Chapter 2 Revenge of the Unborn
- Chapter 3 Hardy and the Vanity of Procreation
- Chapter 4 Lawrence’s Storm of Fecundity
- Chapter 5 The Children of Others in Woolf
- Chapter 6 Reproduction and Dystopia
- Chapter 7 Lessing on Generations and Freedom
- Chapter 8 Procreating on Patmos
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Chapter 4, “Lawrence’s Storm of Fecundity,” examines the stubborn ambivalence toward procreation throughout the novels of D. H. Lawrence. On the one hand Lawrence called the novel “the one bright book of life,” and was more eloquent than any other novelist in defending the form on the basis of its vitality. On the other hand the novels – from Sons and Lovers and The Rainbow to The Lost Girl and Lady Chatterley’s Lover – rarely admit procreation into their pages without a protracted struggle. Reproduction poses a number of problems for Lawrence: it is an outcome of sex that prioritizes procreative ends over erotic means; it is complicit in the spread of population and by extension the decimation of the English countryside; it threatens the autonomy of the individual, especially Ursula Brangwen in The Rainbow and Women in Love. This chapter offers a large-scale interpretation of Lawrence’s contradictions. It argues that in these opposite forces of life and not-life, perpetuation of vitality and suspension of it, we can discover the essential tension of his work. The novel is the theater of action in which this tension is allowed to reverberate.
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- The Novel and the Problem of New Life , pp. 70 - 99Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021