Summary
This study of D. H. Lawrence is the eleventh in a series of short introductory critical studies of the more important British authors. The aim of the series is to go straight to the authors' works; to discuss them directly with a maximum of attention to concrete detail; to say what they are and what they do, and to indicate a valuation. The general critical attitude implied in the series is set out at some length in my Understanding Literature. Great literature is taken to be to a large extent self-explanatory to the reader who will attend carefully enough to what it says. ‘Background’ study, whether biographical or historical, is not the concern of the series.
It is hoped that this approach will suit a number of kinds of reader, in particular the general reader who would like an introduction which talks about the works themselves; and the student who would like a general critical study as a starting point, intending to go on to read more specialized works later. Since ‘background’ is not erected as an insuperable obstacle, readers in other English-speaking countries, countries where English is a second language, or even those for whom English is a foreign language, should find the books helpful. In Britain and the Commonwealth, students and teachers in universities and in the higher forms of secondary schools will find that the authors chosen for treatment are those most often prescribed for study in public and university examinations.
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- D. H. LawrenceThe Novels, pp. iii - ivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1978