Anda belum login :: 25 Jul 2025 12:31 WIB
Detail
ArtikelLove and Hate in D. H. Lawrence  
Oleh: Stevens, Hugh
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: Men and Masculinities vol. 4 no. 4 (Apr. 2002), page 334-345.
Topik: D. H. Lawrence; John Maynard Keynes; John Middleton Murry; Katherine Mansfield; masculinity; homophobia; modernism; feminism; class; ambivalence
Fulltext: 334MMS44.pdf (82.35KB)
Isi artikelFocusing on D. H. Lawrence’s reaction to gay upper-class figures such as John Maynard Keynes, and his awkward relation to the writer John Middleton Murry, the article seeks to unravel the ostensibly “queer” or homoerotic aspects of Lawrence’s writing by analyzing the ambivalent closeness of love and hate in his representations of male same-sex relationships. At the same time as his homophobic outbursts often exhibit the qualities of a homoerotic poetics Lawrence’s language can be simultaneously homophobic and homoerotic. Lawrence’s essay “David”, on Michelangelo’s statue, for example, seems like a homoerotic offering from Lawrence to Murry, which Murry rejects, triggering Lawrence’s furious—yet also “unbearably” ambivalent—attack on both Murry and Murry’s wife, Katherine Mansfield. The proximity of love and hate in Lawrence’s language shows an attraction to homoeroticism even as Lawrence wants to distance himself from the homosexual.
Opini AndaKlik untuk menuliskan opini Anda tentang koleksi ini!

Kembali
design
 
Process time: 0.03125 second(s)