How D. H. Lawrence read Herman Melville

Author(s)

    • Hayes, Kevin J.

Bibliographic Information

How D. H. Lawrence read Herman Melville

Kevin J Hayes

(Studies in English and American literature, linguistics, and culture)

Camden House, 2021

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Details Lawrence's reception of Melville and reveals his underacknowledged role in the Melville Revival, while contributing to the history of the book and the study of the creative process. How Lawrence Read Melville is a highly focused account of D. H. Lawrence's discovery and reception of Herman Melville, from when he first read Moby-Dick as a young man to his final references to Melville in his late works. It shows Lawrence's initial reaction to Moby-Dick; how it led him to other works by Melville, namely Typee and Omoo; and how Melville affected Lawrence's critical and creative writing and shaped his philosophy. This book is a study of the creative process that shows how one great writer inspired another, but it also makes a major contribution to the history of the book and two of its subfields: the history of reading, and reception studies. By his death in 1891, Melville had been forgotten except by a small circle of English enthusiasts. That group put Lawrence onto Melville, whereupon he became a - until now largely unacknowledged - leader of the Melville Revival that rescued the great writer from obscurity. This Swiss army knife of a book will appeal to scholars and booklovers alike.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1: An English Midlands Bookshelf 2: An Archway into the Future 3: Everyman and the Dead Narrator 4: How Moby-Dick Shaped Women in Love 5: A Little Hesperides of the Soul and Body 6: The Symbolistic All-Knowledge 7: The Melville Centenary 8: Typee under Etna 9: Two Days in Tahiti 10: The Voyage Home Index

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